tirret
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]tirret (plural tirrets)
- (heraldry) A manacle, shackle, or swivel.
- 1813, Barak Longmate (the Younger), The Pocket Peerage of England, Scotland and Ireland; ..., page 244:
- Sinister, an unicorn, argent; armed, unguled, mained, tufted, ducally collared, or; on the shoulder, a tirret, or. MOTTO.
- 1885, The Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, page 209:
- A bendlet between two tirrets, over all a lion, rampant. […] On the Shield of dripstone[sic] of Door, a rose within a wreath; the tirrets are profusely used on the wooden ceiling and in the moulding, both external and internal. The wreath is also met with several times.
- 1886, James E. Doyle, The Official Baronage of England: Showing the Succession, Dignities, and Offices of Every Peer from 1066 to 1885, with Sixteen Hundred Illustrations, page 190:
- […] tufted, ducally gorged, with chain reflexed over the back, & charged on the shoulder with a tirret or.
Anagrams
[edit]Norwegian Bokmål
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Verb
[edit]tirret
- inflection of tirre:
- simple past
- past participle