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parade

noun
1. a public procession, especially one celebrating a special day or event and including marching bands and floats.
(人・車などの)祝賀パレード, 記念行列
a formal march or gathering of troops for inspection or display.
(軍隊の)行進, 閲兵式, 観閲式
a series of people or things appearing or being displayed one after the other:
人[物, 事]の連なり, 列; 〖a ~ of A〗 一連のA
e.g. the parade of Hollywood celebrities who troop onto his show.
〖単数形で〗見せびらかし, 誇示
e.g. the parade of lunacy and corruption will continue.
⦅主に英⦆ 商店街; …通り; 遊歩道
a row of stores:
e.g. a shopping parade.
閲兵場(parade ground); 閲兵

verb
〖~+副詞〗 〈人・兵隊などが〉行進する, パレードする
e.g. no object : officers will parade through the town center
〈部隊など〉を行進させる; 〈通りなど〉を行進する
e.g. with object : carefree young men were parading the streets.
with object display (someone or something) while marching or moving around a place:
e.g. guards dragged him from his home and paraded him through the streets.
with object display (something) publicly in order to impress or attract attention:
〈人・物〉を見せびらかす; …をひけらかす(show off)
e.g. he paraded his knowledge.
(実際とは違い) «…として» まかり通っている, «…ということに» なっている «as»
e.g. these untruths parading as history.
e.g. the recruits were due to parade that day.

PHRASES
taking part in a parade.
on public display:
e.g. politicians are always on parade.

DERIVATIVES
parader noun

ORIGIN
mid 17th century: from French, literally ‘a showing’, from Spanish parada and Italian parata, based on Latin parareprepare, furnish’.