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词汇 blazon
释义

Definition of blazon in English:

blazon

verb ˈbleɪz(ə)nˈbleɪz(ə)n
[with object]
  • 1with adverbial of place Display prominently or vividly.

    显著展示;生动展示

    they saw their company name blazoned all over the media

    他们发现本公司的名称显著载于各种媒体。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A futuristic yellow ‘He’ is blazoned distractingly across her chest.
    • In contrast to Keiley, whose directorial stamp is blazoned on her productions as plainly as a Nike logo, Irvine's effect is more elusive.
    • The sun set a blazoned flag of red and gold across the sky.
    • The most majestic works here are his paintings of mountains with words blazoned across them, like the hillside behind the Hollywood sign (which he could see from his studio).
    • On it was blazoned the news that the Krankies were coming to Scarborough for the summer.
    • Instead of the horrendous front pages of last week, full of trauma, assault, and invasion of privacy, today's paper was blazoned with four articles I was interested in.
    • It has every right to be blazoned all over news sites, personal sites, but is not really suitable for sites devoted to light entertainment.
    • The sky was a bright clear blue, blazoned with sunbeams and dashed with the occasional puff of cloud.
    • The title from the original play, though, won out, and The Children's Hour, with Lillian Hellman's name blazoned across the ‘based on’ screen credit, was released in 1961.
    • I thrust again at the female and almost lose my weapon as she makes a grab for it, the fizzing flame throwing lurid patterns of light across the designs blazoned onto the surface of the tower.
    • The names of the Americans are then blazoned across the screen.
    • I have to confess to a moment of carelessness due largely to the CD labelling which blazons only the two major works.
    • If these symbols were written by hand, and not stamped out by computer and blazoned into the controls as they were on the Ascalon, then the newly found markings could conceivably have been done by a hand less steady or confident than normal.
    • Great minds are reduced to painting landscapes with Bible verses blazoned across them, [making] videos to 15-year-old Christian propaganda songs, and creating music that all sounds the same.
    • Her matted hair scraped her shoulders as it played in midair, and accentuated a dark crimson handprint blazoned across her shoulder and neck.
    • Now it appears that through either an error or otherwise, that this whistleblower that resides in a very small town has received a document that had blazoned across it an envelope that specifically pointed to him being the whistleblower.
    • The paired subjects were given various flashcards, blazoned with a star, a crescent, a box, a circle; then separated and asked to concentrate on the identity of the card their opposite number held.
    • Somehow you get the feeling that if this had been run by men, the names of the founders and subsequent dignitaries would have been blazoned all over its history.
    • On the wall behind the head are blazoned in vast letters and four languages words that now seem further than ever from reality, ‘Workers of the world, unite’.
    • Howard Dean, Wesley Clark and now Kerry, with his long string of victories, have seen their faces blazoned across news-magazine covers.
    Synonyms
    display, exhibit, show, put on display, draw attention to, present, spread, emblazon, plaster, flaunt, parade, reveal
    1. 1.1 Report (news), especially in a sensational manner.
      (尤指耸人听闻地)报道(新闻)
      accounts of their ordeal were blazoned to the entire nation

      对他们所述的苦难经历在全国作了突出报道。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Newspapers still blazoned headlines on the catastrophe, and articles described the bombing as the work of one man.
      • Predictably, the New York Times has enhanced these efforts by blazoning them on Page One.
      • They do not want to see their names blazoned across the papers because they were out there protecting us.
      • Editors who blazon every rumour on their front pages, politicians who hold weekly press conferences on ‘international threat levels’ and policemen who boast their tally of menaces averted are the arms salesmen of terror.
      • The story was blazoned over front pages, complete with photos of Michelle, just as the government was about to launch its campaign to reassure young women of confidentiality over contraception or abortion help.
      • This month the subject was blazoned across the covers of such disparate magazines as U.S. News and World Report, Tikkun, Commentary, and Foreign Policy.
      • ‘I just laid back and let him rape me so that he would not bash me,’ was blazoned across pages 9 and 10 of the Herald.
      • At the time of ‘the greatest manhunt in history’ Galt saw his name blazoned in banner headlines.
      Synonyms
      publicize, make known, make public, bring to public notice/attention, announce, report, communicate, impart, disclose, reveal, divulge, leak, publish, broadcast, transmit, issue, post, put out, distribute, spread, unfold, disseminate, circulate, air, herald, trumpet, advertise, proclaim, promulgate
      informal splatter
  • 2Heraldry
    Describe or depict (armorial bearings) in a correct heraldic manner.

    〔纹章〕(用正确的纹章术语)描述(纹章)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The badge for it is blazoned: Per pale sable and argent, three wolf's teeth issuant from dexter and as many from sinister counterchanged.
    • This design is blazoned as ‘Gules, three lions passant guardant in pale Or,’ and it is still the coat of arms of England today.
    • This coat of arms is blazoned as: Argent on a pale between two fleurs-de-lis gules a cross of the field.
    • With the exception of the arms of the two queens, Eleanor of Provence and Eleanor of Castile, which appear impaled with the English royal arms on the Heralds' Roll, the early rolls never blazon the arms of women.
    • Brunâtre can be seen in the brown lion rampant in the arms of Simón Bolívar, and is blazoned "Braun" in German heraldry.
    1. 2.1 Inscribe or paint (an object) with arms or a name.
      在(物体)上镌刻(或绘制)(纹章,姓名)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Iris extended her arm and pointed at the insignia blazoned onto his jacket.
      • Just as he was finally feeling secure again, the moment he came up to the door which bore his name and title blazoned boldly on an antique brass plate, the dread returned yet again in full force.
      • He touched the entwined dragons that were blazoned onto his skin.
      • At Fonthill the crest and the thirty-six quarterings of Beckford's full coat-of-arms were blazoned on the carpets and painted glass windows.
      • Yeah, he was pretty hot, but I doubted he owned a tee shirt that didn't have Abercrombie or American Eagle blazoned across it.
      • This private altarpiece says little for the modesty of the canon, whose coat-of-arms with a hare is blazoned at the hem of the Virgin's robe in the corner of the picture.
      • After all I had the Times logo blazoned all over the sides of my vehicle and it was an Astra.
      • Why would an occasional fisherman say this of a boat that a well-meaning NGO - its name blazoned on the side of the boat - gave him a few months ago?
noun ˈbleɪz(ə)nˈbleɪz(ə)n
Heraldry
  • 1A correct description of armorial bearings.

    〔纹章〕对纹章(图案等)所作的确切描述

    the book contains tens of thousands of blazons of arms held by English families
    mass noun his knowledge of medieval blazon was unrivalled
    Example sentencesExamples
    • There are rules governing the way a blazon is written, which make it possible for anyone who understands them to draw an accurate rendition of the arms from the blazon.
    • The words of the heraldic blazon contained in the Order of the King in Council of Nov. 5, 1800, and announced to the nation by the Proclamation of Jan. 1, 1801, prescribes the form in which the national flag is to be constructed.
    • I wonder whether some standardised form of description, akin to heraldic blazon, will gradually emerge.
    • The original blazon is: ‘Or, on a chev. betw. three leopards' heads gu, a crescent of the field.’
    • As these heraldic arms became more elaborate, their description or blazon came to acquire its own rules, arcane vocabulary, and concise syntax.
    1. 1.1archaic A coat of arms.
      〈古〉纹章,盾徽
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The marriage was annulled in 1582 and Margherita became a nun, but the blazon was left to add luster to Farnese status.
      • This came with the proviso that Lodovico not remove any of the three Guicciardini coats of arms, and that he not place his own blazon anywhere on the facade, ‘especially on the outer side that faces onto the piazza.’
      • In fact, he claimed Erôs as his deity, and even had his image emblazoned on his shield, rather than, as was custom, his ancestral blazon, or the sign of the father.
      • Johnny's heart ached when he saw Tom with the three golden boars' heads that marked the blazon of the House of Swynford.
      • Well before the renaissance, the new men were buying up land, seizing cities, glorifying themselves (the Visconti are a fine example of the breed) with new titles and heraldic blazons.

Origin

Middle English (denoting a shield, later one bearing a heraldic device): from Old French blason 'shield', of unknown origin. The sense of the verb has been influenced by blaze3.

Rhymes

brazen, emblazon, liaison, raisin

Definition of blazon in US English:

blazon

verbˈblāz(ə)nˈbleɪz(ə)n
[with object]
  • 1with adverbial of place Display prominently or vividly.

    显著展示;生动展示

    they saw their company name blazoned all over the media

    他们发现本公司的名称显著载于各种媒体。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The sun set a blazoned flag of red and gold across the sky.
    • It has every right to be blazoned all over news sites, personal sites, but is not really suitable for sites devoted to light entertainment.
    • The names of the Americans are then blazoned across the screen.
    • On it was blazoned the news that the Krankies were coming to Scarborough for the summer.
    • Instead of the horrendous front pages of last week, full of trauma, assault, and invasion of privacy, today's paper was blazoned with four articles I was interested in.
    • A futuristic yellow ‘He’ is blazoned distractingly across her chest.
    • The title from the original play, though, won out, and The Children's Hour, with Lillian Hellman's name blazoned across the ‘based on’ screen credit, was released in 1961.
    • Now it appears that through either an error or otherwise, that this whistleblower that resides in a very small town has received a document that had blazoned across it an envelope that specifically pointed to him being the whistleblower.
    • On the wall behind the head are blazoned in vast letters and four languages words that now seem further than ever from reality, ‘Workers of the world, unite’.
    • The most majestic works here are his paintings of mountains with words blazoned across them, like the hillside behind the Hollywood sign (which he could see from his studio).
    • In contrast to Keiley, whose directorial stamp is blazoned on her productions as plainly as a Nike logo, Irvine's effect is more elusive.
    • The paired subjects were given various flashcards, blazoned with a star, a crescent, a box, a circle; then separated and asked to concentrate on the identity of the card their opposite number held.
    • Great minds are reduced to painting landscapes with Bible verses blazoned across them, [making] videos to 15-year-old Christian propaganda songs, and creating music that all sounds the same.
    • The sky was a bright clear blue, blazoned with sunbeams and dashed with the occasional puff of cloud.
    • I thrust again at the female and almost lose my weapon as she makes a grab for it, the fizzing flame throwing lurid patterns of light across the designs blazoned onto the surface of the tower.
    • Howard Dean, Wesley Clark and now Kerry, with his long string of victories, have seen their faces blazoned across news-magazine covers.
    • I have to confess to a moment of carelessness due largely to the CD labelling which blazons only the two major works.
    • If these symbols were written by hand, and not stamped out by computer and blazoned into the controls as they were on the Ascalon, then the newly found markings could conceivably have been done by a hand less steady or confident than normal.
    • Somehow you get the feeling that if this had been run by men, the names of the founders and subsequent dignitaries would have been blazoned all over its history.
    • Her matted hair scraped her shoulders as it played in midair, and accentuated a dark crimson handprint blazoned across her shoulder and neck.
    Synonyms
    display, exhibit, show, put on display, draw attention to, present, spread, emblazon, plaster, flaunt, parade, reveal
    1. 1.1 Report (news), especially in a sensational manner.
      (尤指耸人听闻地)报道(新闻)
      accounts of their ordeal blazoned to the entire nation

      对他们所述的苦难经历在全国作了突出报道。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They do not want to see their names blazoned across the papers because they were out there protecting us.
      • The story was blazoned over front pages, complete with photos of Michelle, just as the government was about to launch its campaign to reassure young women of confidentiality over contraception or abortion help.
      • Newspapers still blazoned headlines on the catastrophe, and articles described the bombing as the work of one man.
      • ‘I just laid back and let him rape me so that he would not bash me,’ was blazoned across pages 9 and 10 of the Herald.
      • Predictably, the New York Times has enhanced these efforts by blazoning them on Page One.
      • This month the subject was blazoned across the covers of such disparate magazines as U.S. News and World Report, Tikkun, Commentary, and Foreign Policy.
      • At the time of ‘the greatest manhunt in history’ Galt saw his name blazoned in banner headlines.
      • Editors who blazon every rumour on their front pages, politicians who hold weekly press conferences on ‘international threat levels’ and policemen who boast their tally of menaces averted are the arms salesmen of terror.
      Synonyms
      publicize, make known, make public, bring to public attention, bring to public notice, announce, report, communicate, impart, disclose, reveal, divulge, leak, publish, broadcast, transmit, issue, post, put out, distribute, spread, unfold, disseminate, circulate, air, herald, trumpet, advertise, proclaim, promulgate
  • 2Heraldry
    Describe or depict (armorial bearings) in a correct heraldic manner.

    〔纹章〕(用正确的纹章术语)描述(纹章)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This coat of arms is blazoned as: Argent on a pale between two fleurs-de-lis gules a cross of the field.
    • With the exception of the arms of the two queens, Eleanor of Provence and Eleanor of Castile, which appear impaled with the English royal arms on the Heralds' Roll, the early rolls never blazon the arms of women.
    • This design is blazoned as ‘Gules, three lions passant guardant in pale Or,’ and it is still the coat of arms of England today.
    • Brunâtre can be seen in the brown lion rampant in the arms of Simón Bolívar, and is blazoned "Braun" in German heraldry.
    • The badge for it is blazoned: Per pale sable and argent, three wolf's teeth issuant from dexter and as many from sinister counterchanged.
    1. 2.1 Inscribe or paint (an object) with arms or a name.
      在(物体)上镌刻(或绘制)(纹章,姓名)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Why would an occasional fisherman say this of a boat that a well-meaning NGO - its name blazoned on the side of the boat - gave him a few months ago?
      • He touched the entwined dragons that were blazoned onto his skin.
      • This private altarpiece says little for the modesty of the canon, whose coat-of-arms with a hare is blazoned at the hem of the Virgin's robe in the corner of the picture.
      • Yeah, he was pretty hot, but I doubted he owned a tee shirt that didn't have Abercrombie or American Eagle blazoned across it.
      • Just as he was finally feeling secure again, the moment he came up to the door which bore his name and title blazoned boldly on an antique brass plate, the dread returned yet again in full force.
      • At Fonthill the crest and the thirty-six quarterings of Beckford's full coat-of-arms were blazoned on the carpets and painted glass windows.
      • Iris extended her arm and pointed at the insignia blazoned onto his jacket.
      • After all I had the Times logo blazoned all over the sides of my vehicle and it was an Astra.
nounˈblāz(ə)nˈbleɪz(ə)n
Heraldry
  • 1A correct description of armorial bearings.

    〔纹章〕对纹章(图案等)所作的确切描述

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There are rules governing the way a blazon is written, which make it possible for anyone who understands them to draw an accurate rendition of the arms from the blazon.
    • The words of the heraldic blazon contained in the Order of the King in Council of Nov. 5, 1800, and announced to the nation by the Proclamation of Jan. 1, 1801, prescribes the form in which the national flag is to be constructed.
    • I wonder whether some standardised form of description, akin to heraldic blazon, will gradually emerge.
    • As these heraldic arms became more elaborate, their description or blazon came to acquire its own rules, arcane vocabulary, and concise syntax.
    • The original blazon is: ‘Or, on a chev. betw. three leopards' heads gu, a crescent of the field.’
    1. 1.1archaic A coat of arms.
      〈古〉纹章,盾徽
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In fact, he claimed Erôs as his deity, and even had his image emblazoned on his shield, rather than, as was custom, his ancestral blazon, or the sign of the father.
      • This came with the proviso that Lodovico not remove any of the three Guicciardini coats of arms, and that he not place his own blazon anywhere on the facade, ‘especially on the outer side that faces onto the piazza.’
      • Johnny's heart ached when he saw Tom with the three golden boars' heads that marked the blazon of the House of Swynford.
      • Well before the renaissance, the new men were buying up land, seizing cities, glorifying themselves (the Visconti are a fine example of the breed) with new titles and heraldic blazons.
      • The marriage was annulled in 1582 and Margherita became a nun, but the blazon was left to add luster to Farnese status.

Origin

Middle English (denoting a shield, later one bearing a heraldic device): from Old French blason ‘shield’, of unknown origin. The sense of the verb has been influenced by blaze.

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