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lozengy

/ ˈ±ôÉ’³úɪ²Ô»åÏôɪ /

adjective

  1. usually postpositive heraldry divided by diagonal lines to form a lattice
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged†2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Example Sentences

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Fitzwilliam bore “Lozengy silver and gules.â€

From

There is some record of how the cathedral has at various times been paved, as Dr Plot tells us that "the old floor of the choir was paved lozengy with cannel coal and alabaster, the former got at Beaudesert," and at one time the nave and aisles were paved with brick.

From

Corncrix Party per pale, a pale; first, gules, a fesse dancette, sable; second, vert, bendy, lozengy, purpure cottised with nodules of the first; third, sable, three billets bendwise in fesse, or: sur tout de tout, a barber's pole cockbilled on a sinking gasometer, all proper.

From

The Shield of the famous Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, in the early Rolls is blazoned as “masculéeâ€: but his Seal proves it to have been, as in No. 145, lozengy vair and gu.

From

And it must here be observed that the Lozenge, Fusil, Billet, Gyron, and Frette were not used as single charges by the early Heralds; but by them the fields of Shields were divided lozengy and gyronny, or they were semée of Billets, or covered over with Frette-work, from which the single charges evidently were afterwards obtained.

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