urinant

English

Etymology

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

Adjective

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.

Coordinate terms

Translations

Further reading

Anagrams

French

Participle

urinant

  1. present participle of uriner

Anagrams

Latin

Verb

ūrīnant

  1. third-person plural present active indicative of ūrīnō
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