lozenge
English
WOTD – 11 February 2011
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French losenge (“rhombus”), from Old French *lose (“flag-stone”), from Vulgar Latin *lausa, from Gaulish *lausā, from Proto-Celtic *lausā (“stone”), from Proto-Indo-European *leh₁w- (“stone”). Cognate with Spanish losa (“square tile”).
Noun
lozenge (plural lozenges)
- (shapes) (heraldry) A quadrilateral with sides of equal length (rhombus), having two acute and two obtuse angles.
- 1658, Sir Thomas Browne, The Garden of Cyrus, Folio Society 2007, p. 167:
- Wherein the decussis is made within a longilaterall square, with opposite angles, acute and obtuse at the intersection; and so upon progression making a Rhombus or Lozenge figuration [...].
- 1848, William Makepeace Thackeray, Vani8ty Fair, Chapter 9:
- How the junior partner of Hobbs and Dobbs leads her smiling to the carriage with the lozenge upon it, and the fat wheezy coachman!
- 2004, Richard Fortey, The Earth, Folio Society 2011, p. 14:
- The floor is constructed from marble lozenges and triangles of every imaginable hue: yellow and pink and all manner of mottled and blotched shades, framed in white.
- 1658, Sir Thomas Browne, The Garden of Cyrus, Folio Society 2007, p. 167:
- A small tablet (originally diamond-shaped) or medicated sweet used to ease a sore throat.
- 1918, W. B. Maxwell, chapter 3, in The Mirror and the Lamp:
- One saint's day in mid-term a certain newly appointed suffragan-bishop came to the school chapel, and there preached on “The Inner Life.” He at once secured attention by his informal method, and when presently the coughing of Jarvis […] interrupted the sermon, he altogether captivated his audience with a remark about cough lozenges being cheap and easily procurable.
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Synonyms
Translations
rhombus
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