tuille

Etymology
From, from , , taken to be variants of (modern , from , and thus a . The French term occurs in only one medieval work and the English term in only two (one a translation of the French work), where the interpretation of the term as referring to an armor plate is uncertain (words for cloth and weapons are spelled the same way and could have been meant instead). It has been suggested that the interpretation of the term as referring to an element of armor is an error by 1800s antiquarians.

Noun

 * 1) An armor plate hanging down from the breastplate or fauld to cover the thigh, either below or as part of a tasse.