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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
cordon
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a police cordon (=a line of police officers who are preventing people going somewhere)
▪ The demonstrators tried to break through a police cordon.
cordon bleu cookery (=in the style of traditional French cooking of a high standard)
▪ She did a course in cordon bleu cookery.
cordon bleu
▪ a cordon bleu chef
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Rock-throwing protesters broke through the police cordon.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But on Dec. 25, Milosevic banned street demonstrations and deployed cordons of heavily armed riot police to block the parades.
▪ F1 Prisca Yields four fruits to the pound; forms five trusses, then stops; ideal for small greenhouses, cordon.
▪ Looking back, the precipitous shreds of sheeting rain effectively sanctioned a cordon between himself and what had gone before.
▪ The police reacted swiftly and a man who broke through their cordon was brought down by a rugby tackle and arrested.
▪ There they were met by a cordon of police, standing in front of a barrier of police tenders.
II.verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Most of the building is closed off, under repair, with ropes cordoning off huge sections.
▪ The authorities were taken aback, and took the unprecedented step of cordoning off the painting.
▪ You had to chase him off from where you were cordoning off the slip.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cordon

Cordon \Cor"don\ (k[^o]r"d[o^]n; F. k[^o]r`d[^o]N"), n. [F., fr. corde. See Cord.]

  1. A cord or ribbon bestowed or borne as a badge of honor; a broad ribbon, usually worn after the manner of a baldric, constituting a mark of a very high grade in an honorary order. Cf. Grand cordon.

  2. The cord worn by a Franciscan friar.
    --Sir E. Sandys.

  3. (Fort.) The coping of the scarp wall, which projects beyong the face of the wall a few inches.

  4. (Mil.) A line or series of sentinels, or of military posts, inclosing or guarding any place or thing.

  5. A rich and ornamental lace or string, used to secure a mantle in some costumes of state.

    Cordon sanitaire (k?r` d?n" s?`n?`t?r") [F., sanitary cordon], a line of troops or military posts around a district infected with disease, to cut off communication, and thus prevent the disease from spreading. Also used figuratively, of a group of neutral states that forms a barrier between two hostile states. [1913 Webster] ||

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
cordon

mid-15c., "cord or ribbon worn as an ornament," from Middle French cordon "ribbon," diminutive of Old French corde "cord" (see cord). Sense of "a line of people or things guarding something" is 1758. Original sense preserved in cordon bleu (1727) "the highest distinction," literally "blue ribbon," for the sky-blue ribbon worn by the Knights-grand-cross of the Holy Ghost (highest order of chivalry); extended figuratively to other persons of distinction, especially, jocularly, to a first-rate cook. Cordon sanitaire (1857), from French, a guarded line between infected and uninfected districts.

cordon

1560s, "to ornament with a ribbon;" 1891 as "to guard with a cordon;" from cordon (n.). Related: Cordoned; cordoning.\n

Wiktionary
cordon

n. 1 (context archaic English) A ribbon normally worn diagonally across the chest as a decoration or insignia of rank etc. 2 A line of people or things placed around an area to enclose or protect it. 3 (context cricket English) The arc of fielders on the off side, behind the batsman - the slips and gully. 4 (botany) A woody plant, such as a fruit tree, pruned and trained to grow as a single stem on a support. vb. (context with "off" English) To form a '''cordon''' around an area in order to prevent movement in or out.

WordNet
cordon
  1. n. cord or ribbon worn as an insignia of honor or rank

  2. adornment consisting of an ornamental ribbon or cord

Wikipedia
Cordón

Cordón is a central barrio (neighbourhood or district) of Montevideo, Uruguay, located directly East of the Centro. Its main avenue is 18 de Julio Avenue. It is delimited by Miguelete Str. and La Paz Str. to the North, Dr. Barrios Amorin Str. to the West, Canelones Str. to the South and Dr. Joaquin Requena Str., and Rivera & Artigas Avenues to the East.

Cordon (TV series)

Cordon is a 2014 Belgian Flemish-language drama series in 10 parts. It was first broadcast on vtm. The series was written by Carl Joos, directed by Tim Mielants and produced by Eyeworks. The series was also broadcast in the UK on BBC Four from 28 June to 25 July 2015, in five 2-part installments. An American television programme Containment (miniseries) produced for The CW network was loosely based on Cordon.

Usage examples of "cordon".

This was even worse than preparing choux pastry in front of Maitre Chef Duxelles at the Cordon Bleu in Paris.

Officers had cordoned off a wide band of curbside with yellow crime scene tape.

The angle suddenly shifted, revealing several people clumped behind the cordon tape north of Sunset Boulevard by the Guatemalan market.

Israeli helicopter took off bearing the SAS men to their destinations, flying over the Holy Land, bound first for the grim headquarters of Northern Command, where Ray Kerman, Fred, and Charlie would disembark prior to joining the Golani Brigade, the tight IDF battalion that would provide the main cordon in Hebron.

A continuous cordon of jovial but overworked policemen, including some from Italy, France and Germany since the numbers of the tiny Swiss force were simply not up to the task, maintained a clear zone two hundred meters wide between the rapidly growing crowd and the perimeter fence, while on the lakeward side a flotilla of police launches scurried to and fro to keep at bay an armada of boats, yachts and craft of every description.

While cordons of soldiers were placed so as to protect the balloon itself and Montgolfier, no serious attempt was made to restrain numbers or to order them in the neat, ordained spaces generally required by old regime regula-tions.

All day the British forces drew their cordon closer and closer round the Boer positions, making no attempt to rush them, but ringing them round in such a way that there could be no escape for them.

Germans, Henry promised Strauss that the United States would support the reunification of Germany, and would devote its best effort to the creation of a neutral zone, an old-fashioned cordon sanitaire, a string of small non-belligerent states between reunified Germany and its dangerous Soviet neighbor.

On the street, reporters and camera jockeys were pouring out of cars, Harry Sears and a cordon of blues standing at the ready to hold them back.

A dozen or so Specials stood in a cordon around them, watching their captives with empty expressions.

As Master of a Lodge it is your duty to instruct your Brethren that they are all so many constant lessons, teaching the lofty qualifications which are required of those who claim them, and not merely idle gewgaws worn in ridiculous imitation of the times when the Nobles and Priests were masters and the people slaves: and that, in all true Masonry, the Knight, the Pontiff, the Prince, and the Sovereign are but the first among their equals: and the cordon, the clothing, and the jewel but symbols and emblems of the virtues required of all good Masons.

One line of blockhouses there was, it is true--the one called the Schoonspruit cordon, which flanked the De la Rey country.

The plan was to march a British force right through them, then spread out into a wide line and come straight back, driving the burghers on to the cordon of blockhouses, which had been strengthened by the arrival of three regiments of Highlanders.

The Boers, however, had also been reinforced, and showed great energy in their effort to break the cordon which was being drawn round them.

On the 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, and 24th the cordon of the attack was drawn gradually closer, the Boers entirely surrounding the British force, and it was evident that they were feeling round for a point at which an assault might be delivered.