Table of Contents
1. parade
noun. ['pɝˈeɪd'] a ceremonial procession including people marching.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- parade (French)
- parada (Spanish)
Rhymes with Parade
- underplayed
- promenade
- metrodade
- underpaid
- unafraid
- serenade
- portrayed
- palisade
- overstayed
- overplayed
- masquerade
- lemonade
- downgrade
- displayed
- disobeyed
- colonnade
- brascade
- usaid
- upgrade
- unswayed
- replayed
- prepaid
- persuade
- overpaid
- mislaid
- mcquaide
- mcquaid
- mcquade
- mcglade
- mcdaid
How do you pronounce parade?
Pronounce parade as pəreɪd.
US - How to pronounce parade in American English
UK - How to pronounce parade in British English
Sentences with parade
1. Noun, singular or mass
Festivities begin in the morning and run into the early evening with a parade in the late morning hours.
2. Verb, non-3rd person singular present
More than 3,500 marchers, musicians, dancers and floats parade through historic Philadelphia in the Independence Day Parade.
Quotes about parade
1. Sugar, it's no parade but you'll get down the street one way or another, so you'd just as well throw your shoulders back and pick up the pace.
- Barbara Kingsolver, The Poisonwood Bible
2. To preserve the silence within--amid all the noise. To remain open and quiet, a moist humus in the fertile darkness where the rain falls and the grain ripens--no matter how many tramp across the parade ground in whirling dust under an arid sky.
- Dag Hammarskjöld, Markings
3. When you're on top and you lead the parade, everyone's there throwing lilies and lilac water on your head. But when those parades have gone by and there's a storm in your heart, there are very few people that are going to sit there and listen to you bemoan life.
- Sylvester Stallone
3. parade
noun. ['pɝˈeɪd'] an extended (often showy) succession of persons or things.
Antonyms
Etymology
- parade (French)
- parada (Spanish)