knight

     

Knight is the English term for a social position originating in the Midle Ages. In the Commonwealth of Nations, knighthood is a non-heritable form of gentry. Elsewhere, the Spanish Caballero (related to "chivalry"), the Italian Cavaliere, the German Ritter (related to the English word "Rider" and the Swedish word Riddare), or the Polish Kawaler (for Modern Era knighthoods or Rycerz for medieval knighthoods) are commonly used in Continental Europe. Outside the British Commonwealth, the title is respected but may carry less significance, and thus may or may not appear, for example, in the mass media and other publications. There are technically differing levels of knighthood (see Order of the British Empire), but in practice these are even more symbolic than the title itself today and thus only express the greatness of the recipient's achievements in the eyes of the Crown.

Trivia about knight

  • In German, this chess piece is "der Springer"
  • Horse-headed chess piece
  • Queen Elizabeth made Bono an honorary one of these in 2006 (he's Irish, though, so you don't have to call him "Sir")
  • Chivalrous chesspiece (6)
  • Vow,knightor grail
  • It's the only chess piece that can jump over others
  • The first to tell a tale is this medieval fighting man, & it's one to remember
  • It's the only piece that can't move to an adjacent square
  • The only piece in the back row that can start a game
  • Of the chess pieces each player has only 2 of, the one that fits the category
  • A paladin
  • This Canterbury Tale teller "loved chivalry, truth and honor, freedom and courtesy"