enty

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English[edit]

Adjective[edit]

enty (not comparable)

  1. (heraldry, of the base of a shield) Parted off chevronwise; (of a charge) enté en point, inserted into a chevronlike partition of the base of the shield.
    • 1894, Henry Gough, James Parker, A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry, page 230:
      Enty : a word adopted but by few writers from the French enté, a graft , and applied to the base of the shield when parted off by a line chevrouwise : written by some heralds ampty. See Point : also Gusset.
      Argent, on a chief enty [in more recent blazon 'indented'] azure five crosses croslet or—Ralph de Wilshere.
    • 1910, The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and General Information, page 320:
      Shields parted chevronwise are common in the 15th century, when they are often blazoned as having chiefs "enty" or grafted. Aston of Cheshire bore "Party sable and silver cheveronwise" or "Silver a chief enty sable."
      [see illustrations: Aston of Cheshire bears either a black shield with a silver 'pointed pile' at the bottom, or a silver shield with a black pile]
    • 1982, The Flag Bulletin, volume 21, page 46:
      The third is gold with four pales of gules or red. The fourth is gules or red with a gold chain arranged per cross, per saltire, and in orle, charged at the center with an emerald proper [i.e. green]. It is enty of silver with a []

Further reading[edit]

  • 1904, The Ancestor, page 167:
    A beryth a poynt sylvyr the chefe enty of asewre v crosse forme of gold [in the chief]. []

Anagrams[edit]