Trophy
tro-phy [troh-fee]
1. anything taken in war, hunting, competition, etc., esp. when preserved as a memento; spoil, prize, or award.
2. anything serving as a token or evidence of victory, valor, skill, etc.
3. a carving, painting, or other representation of objects associated with or symbolic of victory or achievement.
Origin:
1505–15; earlier trophe < F trophée < L trop(h)aeum < Gk trópaion, n. use of neut. of trópaios, Attic var. of tropaîos of turning or putting to flight, equiv. to trop() a turning (akin to trépein to turn) + -aios adj. suffix