urinant

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Latin ūrīnāns, present active participle of ūrīnor (I dive).

Adjective[edit]

urinant (not comparable)

  1. (heraldry): Of a fish: oriented vertically, with the head to base and tail to chief, as if positioned for diving.
    Antonym: hauriant, haurient
    • 1866, John Edwin Cussans, The Grammar of Heraldry: Containing a Description of All the Principal Charges Used in Armory, the Signification of Heraldic Terms, and the Rules to be Observed in Blazoning and Marshalling ; Together with the Armorial Bearings of All the Landed Gentry in England Prior to the Sixteenth Century, page 84:
      On a chapeau gules, guarded ermine, a gurnet (fish) urinant proper.
    • 1992, Donald R. Mandich, Joseph Anthony Placek, Russian Heraldry and Nobility, Dramco:
      2) gules, in bend two fish, urinant and hauriant, respectively, argent, their fins "dark azure" (sic).
    • 2006, Encyclopedia Americana: Heart to India:
      Azure, three trout interlaced in triangle: the chiefmost naiant, one urinant in bend, and one haurient in bend sinister, all argent.

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French[edit]

Participle[edit]

urinant

  1. present participle of uriner

Anagrams[edit]

Latin[edit]

Verb[edit]

ūrīnant

  1. third-person plural present active indicative of ūrīnō