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Blazonry   Listen
noun
Blazonry  n.  
1.
Same as Blazon, 3. "The principles of blazonry."
2.
A coat of arms; an armorial bearing or bearings. "The blazonry of Argyle."
3.
Artistic representation or display.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Blazonry" Quotes from Famous Books



... and home for country and God, all the way up is an ascending scale, marked by increasing power to suffer; and when we look to the Head of all being, up through principalities and powers and princedoms, with dazzling orders and celestial blazonry, to behold by what emblem the Infinite Sovereign chooses to reveal himself, we behold, in the midst of the throne, "a lamb as ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 4, No. 23, September, 1859 • Various

... of the wars, stuffed full of conceit and warlike terms, like the soldier who, to keep himself from the cold, has lapped himself so close in a tattered ensign for a shelter, that his very outside may show nothing but rags and blazonry." ...
— Waverley Volume XII • Sir Walter Scott

... assault, and planted his colours on its battlement. It was the flag of William the Silent; for the republican banner was composed of the family colours of the founder of the new commonwealth. The blazonry of the proscribed and assassinated rebel waved at last defiantly over one of the chief cities of Spain. Essex and Nassau and all the rest then entered the city. There was little fighting. Twenty-five English and Hollanders were killed, and about as many ...
— The Rise of the Dutch Republic, 1555-1566 • John Lothrop Motley

... caverns; mountains rear To heaven their bald and blackened cliffs, and bow Their tall heads to the plain; new empires rise, Gathering the strength of hoary centuries, And rush down, like the Alpine avalanche, Startling the nations; and the very stars, Yon bright and burning blazonry of God, Glitter awhile in their eternal depths, And, like the Pleiad, loveliest of their train, Shoot from their glorious spheres, and pass away, To darkle in the trackless void; yet Time, Time the tomb builder, holds his fierce career, Dark, stern, all pitiless, and pauses not ...
— McGuffey's Sixth Eclectic Reader • William Holmes McGuffey

... have always expressed a pride in having sprung from the great mass—the people—and have held with the philosopher of Sunnyside, that whether "hereditary rank be an illusion or not, hereditary virtue gives a patent of nobility beyond all the blazonry of the herald's college." The name of Hastings takes its rise from a nobler source; for Mrs. Oliver Glazier brought into the family as blue blood as any in all England. The great family which bears that name in Great Britain can show quarterings of an earlier date ...
— Sword and Pen - Ventures and Adventures of Willard Glazier • John Algernon Owens


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