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Fool's cap   /fulz kæp/   Listen
Fool's cap

noun
1.
A cone-shaped paper hat formerly placed on the head of slow or lazy pupils.  Synonyms: dunce's cap, dunce cap.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Fool's cap" Quotes from Famous Books



... mad you are! How can there be atonement? You cannot wipe things out—on earth. We are of the earth. Records remain. If a man plays the fool, the coward, and the criminal, he must expect to wear the fool's cap, the white feather, and the leg-chain until his life's end. And now, please, let us change the subject. We have been bookish long enough." She rose with a gesture ...
— The Judgment House • Gilbert Parker

... to perform any more, sir," snapped the clown. "I'll do that for her. You put that down in your fool's cap and smoke it. ...
— The Circus Boys In Dixie Land • Edgar B. P. Darlington

... golden spurs were the object of every man's ambition. Without them, neither wealth, nor birth, nor power was properly esteemed; and, at the present time, passing from the lance to the pen, from the casque and shield to the ink-pot and fool's cap, we all seek a passport from the order of Letters. Does this augur good or evil, for the world? The public press of France is conducted with great spirit and talents, on all sides. It has few points in common with our own, beyond the mere fact of its general character. In America, a single literary ...
— Recollections of Europe • J. Fenimore Cooper

... inconceivable to any modern, would they have reserved for an aesthetic type and movement which violated morality and did not even find pleasure, which outraged sanity and could not attain to exuberance, which contented itself with the fool's cap ...
— The Defendant • G.K. Chesterton

... to pray God lest we be poor and steal. Tom would never have come to be what he was but for that dreadful month at Whitchester. Instead of shutting up village-boys and hurting their health if they have done anything wrong, why can't they be ordered to wear a fool's cap for a week, going about their ordinary work? Our eyes would be on them, and they would not have a chance of picking and stealing again; it would give us a little more trouble at first, but not in the long run, and ...
— The Vicissitudes of Bessie Fairfax • Harriet Parr



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