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[ US /ˈpɛnənt/ ]
[ UK /pˈɛnənt/ ]
NOUN
  1. the award given to the champion
  2. a flag longer than it is wide (and often tapering)
  3. a long flag; often tapering

How To Use pennant In A Sentence

  • Three pennants in a row with a World Series title sandwiched in between is not baloney, of course. Baseball’s Even Greater Insults
  • P. pair trawl chalut-boeuf arrastre de pareja panel (of net) face (de filet) pao patent link pelagic trawl, see midwater trawl maillon brevet eslabn de patente pennant rapporteur amante plaited trass trenzado Chapter 5
  • Pennants snapped in the gusty wind, and the banners above her keep rippled in answer.
  • But in the midst of the visitors 'dominance Niko Kranjcar rattled the Albion woodwork from a short corner before Jermaine Pennant, the only real first-half threat to the Baggies, teed up Younes Kaboul to give Pompey an unlikely half-time lead. Express & Star
  • Captain-General Collerne's scarlet masthead pennant coiled over the waves like a serpent threatening to strike.
  • I could not at the time conceive of anything meaner wearing the name of man, of a crime blacker than base ingratitude, of aught more damnable than calumniation of the honored dead; but Massachusetts will have to surrender the pennant of infamy to the South. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 10
  • Tony pointed to the triangular pennant hanging from a short flagstaff at the stern. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • It will be the first time that the ship has sailed with the Duke's pennant flying.
  • Many predicted that Pennant would be rewarded for his form with a call-up to Steve McClaren's squad for the forthcoming matches with Brazil and Estonia.
  • In 1965, Kaat won 18 games for a Twins team that broke the Yankees five-year string of American League pennants.
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