Gaud - What does it mean?
gaud | |
a cheap showy trinket
* Shakespeare
* 1926 Dalmeny lent me red tabs, Evans his brass hat; so that I had the gauds of my appointment in the ceremony of the Jaffa gate, which for me was the supreme moment of the war. - T. E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom
(obsolete) trick; jest; sport
(obsolete) deceit; fraud; artifice
(obsolete) To bedeck gaudily; to decorate with gauds or showy trinkets or colours; to paint.
The difference between gaud and is:
gaud
English
Etymology 1
Noun
(en noun)- an idle gaud
- (Chaucer)
- (Chaucer)
Verb
(en verb)- Nicely gauded cheeks. — Shakespeare.