Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    rampart
    /ˈrampɑːt/

    noun

    • 1. a defensive wall of a castle or walled city, having a broad top with a walkway and typically a stone parapet: "a castle with ramparts and a moat"

    verb

    • 1. fortify or surround with or as if with a rampart: "the town's streets were ramparted with tall mounds of rubble"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. People also ask

  3. 1. : a protective barrier : bulwark. 2. : a broad embankment raised as a fortification and usually surmounted by a parapet. 3. : a wall-like ridge (as of rock fragments, earth, or debris) Examples of rampart in a Sentence.

  4. A rampart is a large wall built round a town, castle, etc. to protect it. Learn more about the word, see examples of usage and find translations in different languages.

  5. rampart. /ˌræmˈpɑrt/. /ˈræmpɑt/. IPA guide. Other forms: ramparts. If you are building a sand castle and want it to be extra realistic, don’t forget the rampart. This protective wall may not keep the ocean away, but it might intimidate a few hostile hermit crabs.

  6. A rampart is a mound or wall for defence, often with a parapet on top. It can also mean a means of protection or defence, or a steep rock wall in a river gorge. See synonyms, translations and usage examples.

  7. RAMPART meaning: 1. a large wall built round a town, castle, etc. to protect it 2. a large wall built round a town…. Learn more.

  8. A rampart is a defensive wall or mound of earth, or a steep rocky bank of a river gorge. Learn the origin, pronunciation and usage of the word rampart from the Oxford English Dictionary, with quotations and historical thesaurus entries.

  9. A rampart is a broad elevation or mound of earth raised as a fortification around a place and usually capped with a stone or earth parapet. Learn more about the word origin, synonyms, and usage of rampart with sentences from various sources.

  1. People also search for