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From em-(prefix meaning ‘on, onto; covered’) + panoply(“complete set of armour”);[1]panoply is derived from Ancient Greekπᾰνοπλῐ́ᾱ(pănoplĭ́ā, “suit of armour”), from πάνοπλος(pánoplos, “in full armour”) (from παν-(pan-, prefix meaning ‘all, every’) + ὅπλον(hóplon, “armour; arms, weapons”)) + -ῐ́ᾱ(-ĭ́ā, suffix forming feminineabstract nouns).
1784, William R Spencer, “Chorus from the Iphigenia in Aulis of Euripides. Written at Harrow School, in the Year 1784.”, in Poems by the Late Hon. William R. Spencer;, new edition, London: James Cochrane and Co.,, published 1835, →OCLC, strophe III, page 139:
I see, I see, empanoply'd in arms, / (Rapt with prophetic fire, sage Chiron cried), / O'er Phrygian plains wide hurling war's alarms, / Thy son, O Thetis, rise, his country's pride.
The grand conglomerate hills of Araby, / That stand empanoplied in utmost thought, / With dazzling ramparts front the Indian sea, / Down there in Hadramaut.
1886 May, Robert Brown, Jun., “To Miss Mildred Hope Courtney McDougall”, in A Trilogy of the Life-to-come and Other Poems, London: David Nutt,, published 1887, →OCLC, page 92:
High hope / Empanoplies the soul. Bright faith / Meets and o'ercomes the victor death, / And trusts the future's grander scope.
It didn't appear to Herbert, however, that Mrs. Brooks exhibited any extravagant joy over the occurrence, and she almost instantly retired with her daughter into the sitting-room, linking her arm in Cherry's, and, as it were, empanoplying her with own invulnerable shawl.
Do not interrupt; a truce to your raillery! It will fall blunted, besides, on the cuirass of an invulnerable will, in which henceforth I am empanoplied.
1912, Thomas Burke, “Paddington”, in Pavements and Pastures: A Book of Songs, London: Printed by the London and Norwich Press, →OCLC; republished in London Lamps: A Book of Songs, New York, N.Y.: Robert M McBride & Co.; London: Grant Richards, 1919, →OCLC, page 15:
Oh, lovely are her [Paddington Station's] lean lines, and lovely her poise, / Empanoplying the long, dim frenzy of noise.
He was marvelling anew, no doubt, as he was presently to express it to the tribunal, that Satan should be permitted so admirably and deceptively to empanoply his servants.