CARDINALS
Proper noun
Cardinals
(baseball) The team St. Louis Cardinals.
(American football) The team Arizona Cardinals.
A sports team at the University of Louisville.
Noun
Cardinals
plural of Cardinal
Anagrams
• rainscald
Noun
cardinals
plural of cardinal
Anagrams
• rainscald
Source: Wiktionary
CARDINAL
Car"di*nal, a. Etym: [L. cardinalis, fr. cardo the hing of a door,
that on which a thing turns or depends: cf. F. cardinal.]
Definition: Of fundamental importance; preëminet; superior; chief;
principal.
The cardinal intersections of the zodiac. Sir T. Browne.
Impudence is now a cardinal virtue. Drayton.
But cardinal sins, and hollow hearts, I fear ye. Shak.
Cardinal numbers, the numbers one, two, three, etc., in distinction
from first, second, third, etc., which are called ordinal numbers.
– Cardinal points (a) (Geol.) The four principal points of the
compass, or intersections of the horizon with the meridian and the
prime vertical circle, north, south east, and west. (b) (Astrol.) The
rising and setting of the sun, the zenith and nadir.
– Cardinal signs (Astron.) Aries, Lidra, Cancer, and Capricorn.
– Cardinal teeth (Zoöl.), the central teeth of bivalve shell. See
Bivalve.
– Cardinal veins (Anat.), the veins in vertebrate embryos, which
run each side of the vertebral column and returm the blood to the
heart. They remain through life in some fishes.
– Cardinal virtues, preëminent virtues; among the ancients,
prudence, justice, temperance, and fortitude.
– Cardinal winds, winds which blow from the cardinal points due
north, south, east, or west.
Car"di*nal, n. Etym: [F. carinal, It. cardinale, LL. cardimalis
(ecclesiæ Romanæ). See Cardinal, a.]
Definition: 1. (R.C.Ch.) One of the ecclesiastical prince who constitute
the pope's council, or the sacred college.
The clerics of the supreme Chair are called Cardinals, as undoubtedly
adhering more nearly to the hinge by which all things are moved. Pope
Leo IX.
Note: The cardinals are appointed by the pope. Since the time of
Sixtus V., their number can never exceed seventy (six of episcopal
rank, fifty priests, fourteen deacons), and the number of cardinal
priests and deacons is seldom full. When the papel chair is vacant a
pope is elected by the college of cardinals from among themselves.
The cardinals take procedence of all dignitaries except the pope. The
principal parts of a cardinal's costume are a red cassock, a rochet,
a short purple mantle, and a red hat with a small crown and broad,
brim, with cards and tessels of a special pattern hanging from it.
2. A woman's short cloak with a hood.
Where's your cardinal! Make haste. Lloyd.
3. Mulled red wine. Hotten.
Cardinal bird, or Cardinal grosbeak (Zoöl.), an American song bird
(Cardinalis cardinalis, or C. Virginianus), of the family
Fringillidæ, or finches having a bright red plumage, and a high,
pointed crest on its head. The males have loud and musical notes
resembling those of a fife. Other related species are also called
cardinal birds.
– Cardinal flower (Bot.), an herbaceous plant (Lobelia cardinalis)
bearing brilliant red flowers of much beauty.
– Cardinal red, color like that of a cardinal's cassock, hat, etc.;
a bright red, darket than scarlet, and between scarlet and crimson.
Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition