An archaic or variant plural form of cavalier, possibly influenced by French or Italian grammar, referring to multiple cavaliers or gentlemen.
An alternative plural of 'cavalier' using a Romance-influenced suffix pattern '-es' rather than English '-s.' This variant reflects the word's Italian/French origins ('cavalliere' in Italian, 'cavalier' in French) and appears in older English texts where Romance grammar patterns influenced English plurals.
The variant 'cavalieres' shows how English was borrowing and adapting words from Romance languages—different writers used different plural forms until English standardized to 'cavaliers,' leaving 'cavalieres' as a historical curiosity in old texts.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.