Library

Video Player is loading.
 
Current Time 0:00
Duration 4:59
Loaded: 0.00%
 
x1.00


Back

Games & Quizzes

Training Mode - Typing
Fill the gaps to the Lyric - Best method
Training Mode - Picking
Pick the correct word to fill in the gap
Fill In The Blank
Find the missing words in a sentence Requires 5 vocabulary annotations
Vocabulary Match
Match the words to the definitions Requires 10 vocabulary annotations

You may need to watch a part of the video to unlock quizzes

Don't forget to Sign In to save your points

Challenge Accomplished

PERFECT HITS +NaN
HITS +NaN
LONGEST STREAK +NaN
TOTAL +
- //

We couldn't find definitions for the word you were looking for.
Or maybe the current language is not supported

  • 00:01

    We call it the regimental jewel.

  • 00:03

    The regiment, the Worcestershire Yeomanry, later to become the Queen's own Worcestershire

  • 00:07

    Hussars, was formed in 1794 to protect these shores against a Napoleonic invasion.

  • 00:17

    It was agreed that the regiment should serve only within the United Kingdom. However, in 1899,

  • 00:25

    when the Boer War was going badly, it was decided that some of the Yeomanry, as volunteers,

  • 00:32

    would be mobilised. And when they left the shores, the countess of Dudley, whose husband,

  • 00:40

    the Earl of Dudley, was a member of the regiment - he was second in command - she presented

  • 00:45

    each and every soldier that went out with a sprig of pear blossom, worked in silk, that they

  • 00:52

    were to wear in their hat as a reminder of the county that they had left, i.e. the pear blossom

  • 01:00

    emblem of Worcestershire. When they returned in 1903, she presented this sprig of pear

  • 01:07

    blossom, manufactured by Faberge. It's a lovely piece. It certainly is a lovely piece. This

  • 01:14

    looks for all the world like a glass vase. And there's a stratagem here that it's filled

  • 01:18

    with water, and this is the meniscus, the top of the water, but in fact, it isn't. It's a

  • 01:23

    solid block, which is apparently glass but it's certainly not - it's stone. It's rock

  • 01:28

    crystal. It's icy cold even on this hot day and it's immensely difficult to carve - it's

  • 01:34

    much, much harder than glass. And then the magic is to make it look as if the sprig is

  • 01:40

    supported in this, so it's drilled down into the rock crystal to receive the stalk, and

  • 01:46

    the stalk is made of gold. And it's almost as if we can see from time to time that new

  • 01:51

    buds are going to blossom on here. That would be quite surreal, wouldn't it? And then the

  • 01:55

    flowers are made of enamelled silver and tiny silver stamens but in the centre there's a

  • 02:00

    dewdrop of diamond, glinting in the sunshine here. And the leaves are made of Siberian

  • 02:07

    Jade, from the Ural mountains. And then we have the original fitted box, which is made

  • 02:12

    of holly wood - literally the wood of the holly tree, from Siberia. And then, just to get

  • 02:16

    the message across she probably asked Faberge to put a triumphant laurel here in green gold

  • 02:22

    tied with the red-gold bow. That was the battle honour that was awarded to them in South Africa.

  • 02:28

    That's very good. It is recorded there. That's why we think it's 1904 because that was when

  • 02:35

    they received the battle honour, South Africa. Well, it's absolutely bang on for date for

  • 02:39

    the object because some of the best things from Faberge are made in the 20th century

  • 02:42

    in the age of the motor car, the telephone and electricity. And here we have something

  • 02:46

    that is redolent of the distance past because it's a such shrieking pitch of perfection

  • 02:51

    and luxury. And it's an utterly breathtaking object. So give me some impression of what

  • 02:56

    the pear blossom means in this regiment, to you. I think when it was presented by Lady

  • 03:02

    Dudley, she did it to recognise the sacrifice of those soldiers that didn't come back from

  • 03:08

    the Boer War and those that were injured. I think it's a focal point for the younger

  • 03:18

    soldiers, soldiers such as me that are way past their sell by date. I just think it's this focal

  • 03:26

    point from what has happened years ago that we still on occasions look back to but it's

  • 03:33

    important that we also look forward. I think it provides that link for all the different

  • 03:38

    ages of soldiers that have soldiered with the regiment and are intending in the future

  • 03:43

    to soldier with the regiment. It still comes out on dinner nights when the officers of

  • 03:48

    the squadron and the regiment are assembled. It's perhaps suffered over the years being

  • 03:54

    stuffed under the bed on occasions at the end of the evening or missed the odd bread

  • 03:59

    roll. It's making me utterly breathless because I find Faberge things on the Antiques Roadshow

  • 04:06

    but nothing of this scale. I can tell you that the size of the object, the sophistication

  • 04:12

    of the object, the provenance of the object brings it very, very close to only two other

  • 04:16

    flower studies in the United Kingdom, which are in the Royal Collection. Given the qualifications

  • 04:22

    I already put on this object, it is a towering masterpiece of the goldsmith's art by the

  • 04:27

    most famous goldsmith of the 20th century. So I'm going to tell you, in my opinion, that

  • 04:33

    this is worth a million pounds. Goodness gracious. Well, I'm supposed to say now, it's not for

  • 04:44

    sale. It certainly isn't for sale. I'm just the custodian. Well, that is the rub, isn't

  • 04:49

    it. It's not for sale. A million pounds for that tiny flower. Wow. Good job it's well

  • 04:51

    protected.

All

The example sentences of REDOLENT in videos (1 in total of 1)

that wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present redolent noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner distance noun, singular or mass past adjective because preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner such adjective shrieking verb, gerund or present participle pitch noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction perfection noun, singular or mass

Use "redolent" in a sentence | "redolent" example sentences

How to use "redolent" in a sentence?

  • In a world so redolent with wonder, how can we allow ourselves to conduct our daily lives with so little insight, such absence of dignity?
    -Bruce Sterling-

Definition and meaning of REDOLENT

What does "redolent mean?"

/ˈredlənt/

adjective
strongly reminiscent or suggestive of.

What are synonyms of "redolent"?
Some common synonyms of "redolent" are:
  • evocative,
  • suggestive,
  • reminiscent,
  • remindful,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.