- scalade
- or scalado noun (plural -lades or -lados) Etymology: obsolete Italian scalada, from scalare to scale, from scala ladder, staircase, from Late Latin — more at scale Date: 1591 archaic escalade
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
Scalade — Sca*lade , Scalado Sca*la do, n. (Mil.) See {Escalade}. Fairfax. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scalade — /skeuh layd /, n. Archaic. escalade. [1585 95; var. of ESCALADE] * * * … Universalium
scalade — sca·lade … English syllables
scalade — … Useful english dictionary
Scalado — Scalade Sca*lade , Scalado Sca*la do, n. (Mil.) See {Escalade}. Fairfax. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scalado — noun see scalade … New Collegiate Dictionary
GLOGAU — (20), a town with a strong fortress in Silesia, on the Oder, 35 m. NW. of Liegnitz; is a place of manufacture; was brilliantly taken by Frederick the Great in the Silesian War on the 9th March 1741 by scalade, in one hour, at the very break of … The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
scalado — noun see scalade … Useful english dictionary
skallade — skallade, ader, ado var. ff. scalade, scalado … Useful english dictionary