释义 |
Definition of armorial in English: armorialadjective ɑːˈmɔːrɪəlɑrˈmɔriəl Relating to heraldry or heraldic devices. (与)纹章(有关)的,(与)纹章器具(有关)的 纹章,盾徽。 Example sentencesExamples - As in Europe and the United States, armorial porcelain was commissioned in China for the Mexican market in the late eighteenth century.
- Relatively few Americans possessed armorial services, partly because of the expense and partly because few Americans had coats of arms or the pretension to appropriate one.
- She receives lavish gifts and letters with armorial seals from far-away places, possibly from a lover.
- Though there were no differences in arms for daughters, by Strangways’ time heraldry had found its means of recording women's armorial interests.
- Her interest in Chinese armorial ceramics is longstanding, and is matched by research into the collecting of Chinese art in the West in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- This was the heavily carved baroque side table with its armorial shield that still stands in the main hall.
- Uniforms and regimental colours initially embodied the colonel's armorial bearings and livery, but soon took on the state's symbols.
- Rommel presented, together with Giovianni Rovazzani, a beautiful copy of the armorial bearings of the city of Porto Recanati and some illustrated books of the city and its region.
- With the increasing realism of later medieval art, windows begin to include many details of daily life, and their donors are commemorated by being depicted in contemporary dress, or by the inclusion of their armorial bearings.
- Dutch examples with engraved armorial bowls are ridiculously cheap, selling for between £350 and £500 at auction.
- They are one and the same person; Richard is author of both the schoolboy newspaper and the spoof armorial bearings.
- Howard also explores the role of the Swedish East India Company in supplying armorial porcelain to Scotland, which is logical enough considering the proximity of Gothenberg, Sweden, to Scotland.
- There is now a thriving black market in armorial bearings and medieval chivalry.
- Heraldically, perhaps the nicest illustration of genteel, female armorial pride comes again from the Paston family.
- The law states that one must record the use of armorial devices and that means paying a fee.
- The five-bay hammerbeam roof, resting on an embattled and moulded wall plate, has cambered collars, angels, and armorial bosses.
- In England, new coats of arms are granted to individuals by the Earl Marshal of the College of Arms, which oversees the issuing of armorial bearings.
- He became internationally famous for his collection, which included forty-five examples of armorial decoration, now on display in the museum.
- It has been estimated that Britons ordered approximately five thousand armorial services over the course of the eighteenth century, while Continental Europeans ordered approximately three thousand.
- Taxes on hats, dice, clocks, salt, hair powder, gloves, artificial flowers, menservants, game certificates and armorial bearings have also been used in the past.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French armoierie (see armoury). Rhymesaccessorial, accusatorial, advertorial, ambassadorial, arboreal, auditorial, authorial, boreal, censorial, combinatorial, consistorial, conspiratorial, corporeal, curatorial, dictatorial, directorial, editorial, equatorial, executorial, gladiatorial, gubernatorial, immemorial, imperatorial, janitorial, lavatorial, manorial, marmoreal, memorial, monitorial, natatorial, oratorial, oriel, pictorial, piscatorial, prefectorial, professorial, proprietorial, rectorial, reportorial, sartorial, scriptorial, sectorial, senatorial, territorial, tonsorial, tutorial, uxorial, vectorial, visitorial Definition of armorial in US English: armorialadjectiveärˈmôrēəlɑrˈmɔriəl Relating to heraldry or heraldic devices. (与)纹章(有关)的,(与)纹章器具(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - It has been estimated that Britons ordered approximately five thousand armorial services over the course of the eighteenth century, while Continental Europeans ordered approximately three thousand.
- She receives lavish gifts and letters with armorial seals from far-away places, possibly from a lover.
- As in Europe and the United States, armorial porcelain was commissioned in China for the Mexican market in the late eighteenth century.
- Dutch examples with engraved armorial bowls are ridiculously cheap, selling for between £350 and £500 at auction.
- With the increasing realism of later medieval art, windows begin to include many details of daily life, and their donors are commemorated by being depicted in contemporary dress, or by the inclusion of their armorial bearings.
- Heraldically, perhaps the nicest illustration of genteel, female armorial pride comes again from the Paston family.
- Taxes on hats, dice, clocks, salt, hair powder, gloves, artificial flowers, menservants, game certificates and armorial bearings have also been used in the past.
- Relatively few Americans possessed armorial services, partly because of the expense and partly because few Americans had coats of arms or the pretension to appropriate one.
- This was the heavily carved baroque side table with its armorial shield that still stands in the main hall.
- They are one and the same person; Richard is author of both the schoolboy newspaper and the spoof armorial bearings.
- The five-bay hammerbeam roof, resting on an embattled and moulded wall plate, has cambered collars, angels, and armorial bosses.
- He became internationally famous for his collection, which included forty-five examples of armorial decoration, now on display in the museum.
- Her interest in Chinese armorial ceramics is longstanding, and is matched by research into the collecting of Chinese art in the West in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- Uniforms and regimental colours initially embodied the colonel's armorial bearings and livery, but soon took on the state's symbols.
- Rommel presented, together with Giovianni Rovazzani, a beautiful copy of the armorial bearings of the city of Porto Recanati and some illustrated books of the city and its region.
- In England, new coats of arms are granted to individuals by the Earl Marshal of the College of Arms, which oversees the issuing of armorial bearings.
- Howard also explores the role of the Swedish East India Company in supplying armorial porcelain to Scotland, which is logical enough considering the proximity of Gothenberg, Sweden, to Scotland.
- Though there were no differences in arms for daughters, by Strangways’ time heraldry had found its means of recording women's armorial interests.
- The law states that one must record the use of armorial devices and that means paying a fee.
- There is now a thriving black market in armorial bearings and medieval chivalry.
nounärˈmôrēəlɑrˈmɔriəl A book of heraldic devices.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French armoierie (see armoury). |