flag-staff
English
editNoun
editflag-staff (plural flag-staffs or flag-staves)
- Alternative form of flagstaff
- 1816, John Britton, Edward Wedlake Brayley, Thomas Hood, The Beauties of England and Wales:
- At the west is a square tower, of graceless proportions, surmounted by a mean wooden turret and two flag-staves.
- 1928, Arthur Riehl Wilson, Robert Melville Danford, Field Artillery Manual:
- When the Flag is at half-staff, in the case of a cylindrical iron flag-staff, the middle of the hoist is about half-way between the top of the staff and the band to which the top of the guy anchors are fastened.
- 2014, Clements R. Markham, F. H. H. Guillemard, The Lands of Silence, page 495:
- Near this cavern there was a hut for absolute magnetic observations, and on a small hill above, on which was a flag-staff, were the meteorological instruments.
- 2015, Henry Faulds, Nine Years in Nipon, page 261:
- Just outside the outer gateway posts are inserted in the ground wherewith to support the tall flag-staffs used at festivals, and sometimes other smaller ones for the cords on which lanterns are hung during illuminations.