palewise

Etymology

pale + -wise

adv

  1. (chiefly heraldry) Divided by perpendicular vertical lines like pales.
    An oblong figure fesswise divided palewise, from one end a thick projection, and in chief a crescent. 2007, Colin Stewart Sinclair Lyon, Sylloge of Coins of the British Isles, Oxford University Press, USA
  2. (chiefly heraldry) In the direction of or positioned like a pale: vertically.
    Erm. three longbows palewise in fess gu. 1874, John Woody Papworth, An Alphabetical Dictionary of Coats of Arms Belonging to Families in Great Britain and Ireland, page 348
    Three roundels in chief and two horse-shoes palewise in base, probably intended for the arms of Daubeney and Ferrers. 1904, Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art, Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art, page 511
    Anchor: Placed palewise, unless otherwise blazoned 1965, Heather Child, Heraldic Design: A Handbook for Students, Genealogical Publishing Com, page 82
    In place of the rainbow there was, palewise on a field of gules, on either side of the shield, the broken lance which had caused the death of Henri II—Lacrymae hinc, hinc dolor was the motto. And to this symbolism of mourning was also[…] 2019-07-02, Jean Heritier, Catherine de Medici, Routledge
    In one shield the lis are positioned vertically or palewise, […] and the Poutrel lis were shown bend-wise in the glass at Prestwold church and pale-wise in Thomas Jenyns' Ordinary. 2020-01-09, Paul A. Fox, Great Cloister: A Lost Canterbury Tale: A History of the Canterbury Cloister, Constructed 1408-14, with Some Account of the Donors and their Coats of Arms, Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, page 540

adj

  1. (chiefly heraldry) Pale-like, vertical.
    It is essentially the upper portion (or triangle) of the saltire met slightly above the fess point by a palewise line originating from the middle base. No varied field Bendy seems to have been adopted from this division. 1972, Marvin H. Pakula, Heraldry and Armor of the Middle Ages
    Party - in ancient heraldry, the word party, used alone, implied a palewise division of the field. 1983, Charles Boutell, Boutell's Heraldry, Frederick Warne Publishers

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