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Over one shoulder was a banderole of cotton thistles representing tails.
A banderole with the word cras ("tomorrow" in Latin) emerges from the crow's mouth.
A Banderole (Fr.
The commissioning pennant in ships may end in a point, but they can also be forked, in which case it is also called a banderole.
No plume or nobloy fluttered from his plain tilting salade, and even his lance was devoid of the customary banderole.
The blazon of the municipal coat of arms is Gules a Banderole Argent in bend.
One lone, long pubic scroll had sprung loose from its place beneath her panties and unfurled against the creamy field of her thigh like a banderole.
In addition to the frog tongue, in whose banderole she painted a fly, Ellen Cherry gave Boomer the black, bumpy tongue of a chow dog.
A speech scroll, also called a banderole or phylactery in art history, is an illustrative device denoting speech, song, or, in rarer cases, other types of sound.
In heraldry, a banderole is a streamer hanging from beneath the crook of a bishop's crosier and folding over the staff, and for other small streamers or ribbons.
Each panel includes a text inscribed on a floating ribbon or "banderole", while the identities of the figures are carved on the lower border of each panel.
The banderole above says Ecce quod concupivi iam teneo ("Behold what I have desired I now possess").
Agnes rejects him, with the words Illi sum desponsata cui angeli serviunt ("I am betrothed to him who the angels serve") in a banderole above.
A second squire held aloft his master's lance, from the extremity of which fluttered a small banderole, or streamer, bearing a cross of the same form with that embroidered upon his cloak.
The red and silver banderole is a reminder of the Cistercian abbey in Gutenzell with whom the Freiherrn of Freyberg shared authority over the village from 1447 onwards.
A Banderole is a small flag or streamer carried on the lance of a knight, or a long narrow flag, with cleft end flying form the mast-head of a ship in battle.
The second rider bore a slim lance of sharp glass, from which a long banderole of sulphurous yellow, charged with a nine-pointed star of deep black, slowly uncoiled behind him in his flight.
Bannerol, in its main uses is the same as banderole, and is the term especially applied to banners about a yard square carried at the funerals of great men and placed over the tomb.
A banderole precised the use of the one penny stamp: "INTERINSULAR POSTAGE".
Christopher bowed to the corpse and gave the child an envelope filled with piasters, two bottles of Veuve Cliquot, and a satin banderole on which was written a compliment to the dead man.
Radio was a latecomer, and for the most part artillery observation planes communicated with their batteries by dropping messages (generally in the form of marked-up maps) in capsules attached to a banderole, or long streamer.
With its wide border of spiky blossoms enclosing the guild's crests ("Give thanks to God" appears on a banderole), the rug was used as a table covering, as were most Asian carpets imported to Europe.
The Child Christ is naked and holds a banderole adorned with a phrase from the Gospel of Matthew (11:29), ' ("Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in Heart").
Une banderole accrochée au toit indiquait qu'on pouvait louer pour de courtes durées et disposer gratuitement d'une femme de ménage.
But voila, mon petit, here comes Chandos and his company, and there is many a pensil and banderole among yonder squadrons which show that the best blood of England is riding under his banners."