How To Use Herald In A Sentence

  • Digital technology comes to us heralded by a great deal of utopian ballyhoo, but in some surprising ways it discourages creativity.
  • BLITZER: In our strategy session today, President Bush was out heralding what he called the vibrant state of the U.S. economy. CNN Transcript Dec 2, 2005
  • Erin Lyle, co-owner of Marty's Auto on Rathbone Avenue, told the Daily Herald "We have three houses right next to us and we've never had a noise or nuisance issue ... they're (city) not picking on tattoo parlors or grocery stores or anyone else. Archive 2009-04-01
  • But although there was a scare with my first sample being clear, as we'd only just arrived, my second proved that I, along with the entire Sunday Herald table, was completely ratted and therefore allowed to keep the trophy.
  • They also investigate the origins of various heraldic monsters, such as the basilisk (based on the hooded cobra).
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • It's the King coming and the sound of those who herald him with horns of brass pressed to their mouths.
  • The colour of blue on the flag is ‘argent’ as described in heraldry.
  • This year has heralded the completion of a four year project to upgrade a hypobaric chamber to meet Australian Standards.
  • The word has reasserted the romantic, courageous quality that the poet Keats, in “Endymion,” gave it: “Adventuresome, I send/My herald thought into a wilderness.” No Uncertain Terms
  • Tradition took root and the ball has heralded a new beginning almost every year since - in 1942 and 1943, during World War II, the ball was temporarily put out of commission by a war-time "dimout. TIME.com: Top Stories
  • The wyvern was the emblem of the rulers of Wessex and the word "wyvern" is associated with the many areas of Wessex, reflected in many county and town heraldries of the South West and west of England.
  • The heraldic lion across the top is holding a cocoa pod.
  • For the past couple of years, the appearance of Christmas lights and festive decorations has heralded the arrival of a weighty travel anthology.
  • But with all the close horrors of the Venusian climate let's not lose sight of the view from earth, of the herald of the dawn and the evening star of lovers.
  • Both bearings are founded on what is called canting heraldry, a species of art disowned by the writers on the science, yet universally made use of by those who practise the art of blazonry. Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft
  • Yet it still heralds a flurry of excitement (some call it panic) over what exactly is to be cooked and how.
  • Certainly no quarter of a town could use a mark of cadency below a bendlet, and Florence was more careful than most Italian towns to be precise in her heraldry. Donatello, by Lord Balcarres
  • _ -- Is the practice of _dimidiation_ approved of by modern heralds, and are examples of it common? Notes and Queries, Number 188, June 4, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
  • It wasn't so much the oath that roused the furor as the document which accompanied it, entitled Protocols and Requirements Between Spiritual Father & His Spiritual Sons, which takes, Garth George of The New Zealand Herald noted, "1300 words to describe in jaw-dropping detail how the 'spiritual sons' shall behave towards their 'spiritual father.' Cult scene: New Zealand and Africa - Boing Boing
  • With the digital addition of a unicorn's horn, the heraldic beast conjoins a singularly aristocratic symbol of Christian purity and England's national enthusiasm for horses.
  • Brazil's football team was heralded as the magicians of football.
  • As each news bulletin heralds an upwards revision of long past obscene totals, alternative conclusions are easy to avoid.
  • The plans have been heralded as a new era of the housing market.
  • She worked for the Dayton Herald (which later became the Journal-Herald) as a copygirl as a teenager and got her first article published while she was still in high school. Five People Born on February 21 | myFiveBest
  • In ancient heraldry a bendlet azure on a coat was a mark of cadency.
  • Well, one of the very first things you learn about heraldry, is that it’s not a specific image that is linked to a particular person. Poetry in Unexpected Places « Write Anything
  • A few weeks since, the young nobleman would have watched in admiration all that magnificent heraldry of the pomp of the storm.
  • A hacking cough from the porch heralded the arrival of Nancy Little and the Doctor.
  • Judging from the principal's form response to correspondents it sounds like he was also misquoted by the Rutland Herald and has even used blogging in the classroom himself.
  • These are the entourages that follow important people around, made up of advisors, heralds, messengers and servants.
  • A herald announced her as the Countess of Andover, then she descended into the crowd of dancing nobles.
  • Bealtaine, apart from being the Irish word for the month of May, was a festival in pagan Ireland celebrating Spring and heralding the arrival of Summer.
  • Busted heralded a sea change over the past two years by bringing the staccato guitars and bratty vim of American punk-pop groups into the stale world of boy bands.
  • According to The Sydney Morning Herald, a Vietnamese man living in Sefton, Australia died earlier this week after being struck in the chest by police using a Taser device, despite warnings from the gun's manufacturer about using the device in that area of the body. Australian Man Shocked With Taser Gun 13 Times (GRAPHIC VIDEO)
  • This type of pun is of course frequent in heraldic rebuses, but these almost invariably stand for personal names, although they can sometimes be identical with place names; a few also relate to dedications.
  • Certainly, heraldry was known and studied in America at the time of the Revolution, as is indicated by the relatively large number of surviving silver and ceramic pieces with heraldic devices on them.
  • The swan is found in heraldry as a charge, a crest, supporters, and as a badge.
  • Indeed, the following year, in May 1947, Hecht used his own proceeds from the play to pay for an ad in the New York Herald Tribune congratulating the Irgun on “blowing up British trains, robbing British banks, killing British tommies.” Crossing Mandelbaum Gate
  • The Herald said the condition of the hall was inexcusable given the status of the performer.
  • He walked down the gangplank and he pretty much walked on his own and he was then taken off on a stretcher, an eye witness told the Boston Herald. Liverpool owner John Henry taken to hospital after fall on his boat
  • The genus Homo adapted flexibly to new environments and ate a variety of foods, heralding the rise of people.
  • Two good efforts in defeat this season, both on unsuitably softish ground, herald the chances of Top Dirham, who will have conditions to his liking this time.
  • Many designs are found on ancient tiles, such as heraldic devices, monograms, sacred symbols with texts, architectural designs, figures, and patterns. English Villages
  • In a gap between eastern peaks a colorless luminosity of the sky heralded moonrise. THE DISPOSSESSED
  • I reckon," he continued, solemnly, peering at the other from under his rusty hat-brim, "I reckon when you see him, maybe you'll want to put a kind of codicil to that deed to the 'Herald.' The Gentleman from Indiana
  • The book has been heralded as a gay Latino version of Jacqueline Susann's classic ‘Valley of the Dolls.’
  • Earlier this week, someone at the NZ Herald must have hit the wrong buttons when spellchecking this story.
  • What would the advertising johnnies say about that insult to the Herald's core demographic?
  • The man who wore it had his heraldic device embroidered in vivid colours on his breast—a chevron and a stag passant, the scutcheon supported by a branch of olive dexter and a stag’s horn sinister. V. The Closet Where Monsieur Louis of France Recites His Orisons. Book X
  • As heralded previously, we are now ready to move to a new open source community model.
  • Clouds boiled in the sky overhead, blocking out the sun and heralding a storm.
  • I welcome the report as a herald of more freedom, not less.
  • The bright red and gold banners heralded the presence of the house of Pyropoint.
  • Can we take the recent bargain sale of hard-bound editions at hugely reduced rates as a signal heralding the impending tempest befalling the book market?
  • The Herald file on Hugh Puddephat contained only two more cuttings, both considerably older than those connected with the inquest.
  • It will be a moment of deep sadness that will, unless some bowlers of similar calibre are unearthed soon, herald Sri Lanka's slide down the world rankings.
  • The heraldic devices of the lancet tops and in the tracery lights represent other of Louis's and Francoise's possessions and ancestors.
  • Most noticeable, and giving name to the type, was the change of the eagle to the outstretched wing, heraldic style copied from the Great Seal of the United States. Draped Bust Half Dime, Heraldic Eagle, 1800-1805 : Coin Guide
  • He tossed her last week's edition of the "Herald".
  • The accounts were only unfrozen after Milne went to the Herald Sun in mid-February.
  • Henry VII had a Welsh dragon and a wolfhound on his heraldic insignia.
  • When the Scottish King James I came to the throne he ordered that the heraldic red lion of Scotland be displayed on all buildings of importance including pubs.
  • When, in 1409, King Ladislas of Hungary sold Zadar and its surrounding islands to Venice for 100,000 ducats, little did he know he was heralding a great cultural interchange.
  • The great benefic planet Jupiter's move into your fifth solar house this week will generate an immensely powerful vibration, heralding a month of sensual pleasure.
  • A hand of tens and jacks usually heralds catastrophe.
  • Jennifer already knew that such a meeting nearly always heralded the arrival of a secret visitor - usually a priest.
  • Once, the King sent a herald with banner, trumpet and tabard, to invite the captain of Famagusta to surrender.
  • This type of pun is of course frequent in heraldic rebuses, but these almost invariably stand for personal names, although they can sometimes be identical with place names; a few also relate to dedications.
  • Does this herald a permanent return to a homier culture? Home Economics
  • This persecution heralds the rise of the hate-mongering wolf dressed up in the sheep's skin of sexual prudishness.
  • The Herald denounced the verdict, saying it was the " flimsiest of evidence".
  • Dr Dodd told the Glasgow Herald his plans include distilling and delivering aromatherapy products by phone.
  • Orion, whose "bands" are those of winter, heralded by his acronical rising with the sun setting in the West; The Astronomy of the Bible An Elementary Commentary on the Astronomical References of Holy Scripture
  • Among numerous accomplishments, he ushered in the Jazz Age and heralded the fabled Harlem Renaissance.
  • I was advised by one of their herald pursuivant that there is no official or legal way up.
  • Yet his entry into the race has been heralded by the corporate media as a major realignment in Canadian politics.
  • The Miami Herald doubled down today on its failure to address the shortcomings of undercapitalized, undiversified newly minted under-regulated Florida home insurance companies. Discourse.net: Herald Editorial Page Compounds Errors on Home Insurance
  • In other words, investors don't see Harrisburg heralding a Meredith Whitney -esque muni-meltdown. Overheard: Big Shrug
  • Last year, Susan conducted a three week lecture tour in America to tell the story of Irish heraldry and genealogy and spoke in Boston, New York, Minneapolis and Chicago.
  • Friday, November 6, 2009 1: 15 am CST Police prepare drill for plague at school The event will use volunteers pretending to have been stricken by the plague to help test the flow of the site, from initial triage through receiving PROOF of being medicated.www. nwherald.com Ukraine pneumonic plague update 969247 affected fto. co.za Ukraine Flu Trends, OFF THE CHARTS www. google.org URGENT** Ukraine and World Pneumonic Plague Information ukraineplague. blogspot.com Ukraine: Influenza or Pneumonic Plague? WN.com - Articles related to First flu virus detector in JDWNRH
  • My family arms are the same, which were borne by the Gibbons of Kent in an age, when the College of Heralds religiously guarded the distinctions of blood and name: a lion rampant gardant, between three schallop-shells argent, on a field azure. Memoirs of My Life and Writings
  • He was a skinny teenager in camo pants and a helmet, striking a pose with a machine gun, and a similar photo of another young guy: on the back it said "Woody Herald - killed on Guadalcanal.
  • Even the most obscure projects from unheralded directors are finding an audience.
  • Any heraldic information that appeared at the top of the central and right lancets has been lost.
  • Last week it was big news that the race is now a toss-up -- now this Times Herald article. Joe The Nerd Ferraro: What Does an Endorsement Really Mean?
  • The opposition "cannot do anything on their own; it seems everything they do is organized by mabhunu," Mutasa was quoted as telling the Herald, using a pejorative Shona term for whites. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • All three are responsible for one of the most talked-up documentaries to come out of Sundance this year, a film that is being billed as a "reality thriller" and has been heralded by critics as "riveting" and "unforgettable. Ariel and Nev Schulman and Henry Joost cast the Net in ominous 'Catfish' role
  • He had since notched a few notable victories and heralded his arrival back at the top flight by winning the national half marathon title in Castlebar.
  • I used to read the Craven Herald when I lived over here and always pick it up when back in the area.
  • Expectation of Edward's approach had been the reason of his withdrawing his herald from the camp of Bruce, and though the king did not arrive time enough to save Stirling, Mowbray yet hoped he might still be continuing his promised march. The Scottish Chiefs
  • The announcement heralds a significant step forward in the development of global data synchronization, to establish a network with standards compliance and no redundant services.
  • In heraldry the eagle has been used in countless armorial bearings as an allegory of power. Times, Sunday Times
  • There have been two announcements this week that herald some good news for consumers and not so good news for credit providers and retailers.
  • Medieval heraldry often showed an elephant with a castle on its back.
  • Then I called the herald, and said, "Sound for the fire. The Bull From The Sea
  • Please remember that if you are no longer your groups pursuivant/herald, you must submit a change of officer form to your regional and the Dragon Herald.
  • The evolutional orders,206 by which greater depth or shallowness is given to the battle line, are given by word of mouth by the enomotarch (or commander of the section), who plays the part of the herald, and they cannot be mistaken. The Polity of the Athenians and the Lacedaemonians
  • Suppose someone should meet you in the middle of Herald Square, hand you a ring-tailed tiger, and then skiddoo. Shorty McCabe
  • This speech does not report the movement of the betrothal message, from kingly words recounted, to messenger, to scroll, to herald's voice.
  • The The Christian herald is also a combatant, in which respect he is distinguished from the herald at the games. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Its own name is of heraldic origin and refers to the three roses in a bend on the shield of the counts of Wasserburg.
  • If you do not believe that a fluctuating Simon can be changed into a rock; if you do not believe that a Magdalene can, through the grace of God, become a herald of the resurrection; if you do not believe that this world of men is a salvable world; then it is not to be wondered at that you are blue. Sermons on Biblical Characters
  • The design also preserves the Army's historic heraldry and lineage.
  • Let me help add a little historical information regarding the use of a few non-traditional heraldric colors and metals. Day 18: Final days of UK filming
  • Turning off at the village, one is confronted by a beautifully asphalted and signposted road which heralds driving pleasure for a fair distance.
  • We here at the Sunday Herald sports desk, in a determined effort to get to the bottom of this, extended the quest for the answer to some of the leading lights in the Scottish game.
  • Some heralded his Soul Mountain as a great novel, but others found it unreadable.
  • yet another book on heraldry might be thought redundant
  • The July-August 2001 eruption at Etna was heralded by a seismic swarm initiated during the night of 12-13 July.
  • His niece lives in Barnoldswick and still has a scrapbook of his original cuttings from the Herald.
  • The rose is the emblem of England and in heraldry is used as the mark of cadency for a seventh son.
  • She may be of far less importance in the great world of society than some Mrs. Smith, who, having nothing else, is set down as of the highest rank in that unpublished but well-known book of heraldry which is so thoroughly understood in America as a tradition. Manners and Social Usages
  • Then, in what amounts to a stunning yet unheralded philosophical inversion, throngs of ecclesiastics and scholars began to declare that it was the laws of physics themselves that served as proof of the wisdom and power of God.
  • As the lights go down strobe lighting and terrific claps of thunder herald the storm.
  • According to the Daily Herald, "in lieu of taking unpaid days off (furlough days), an employee may also choose to have the accumulated monetary value of the furlough days prorated on an annual basis, and then deducted in equal amounts over the 26 pay checks they receive during the year. City of Aurora Agrees to Retroactive Raises and Guarantees of No Layoffs in Exchange for 2 Weeks of Furloughs for AFSCME Local 3298
  • FDR’s move, which came 5 days after he was inaugurated, is heralded as saving the run on the Banks. Think Progress » More Americans have a ‘favorable’ opinion of the IRS than of the Tea Party.
  • A Lion walking and looking about him, the early Heralds held to be acting the part of a leopard: consequently, when he was in any such attitude, they blazoned him as “_a leopard_.” The Handbook to English Heraldry
  • Marlborough then ploughed out into the stormy Mediterranean and passed the rest of the Task Group, her arrival at the Cyprus training grounds being heralded by a severe electrical storm and waterspouts.
  • Even with ‘traditional’ flag design there are places where heraldic blazonry is unable to describe a flag precisely, and we have to fall back on other methods.
  • The Herald's editorial thundered against the hot-headed motorists who had caused immense danger in Skipton over the Easter holiday.
  • But the issue was fascinating because of other things, heralding the rapid development of technology in the next century.
  • In 2003, he signed a proclamation heralding the recovery of the American alligator.
  • Earlier, he dealt with vernacular quotations, including decorative evocations of the cults of American gangsterism and Elvis Presley, and kitsch phenomena such as biker heraldry.
  • The incandescent plume towered like an awesome thunderhead heralding Armageddon. THE X FILES 3: GROUND ZERO
  • Part of the blame lies with the source story at the Rutland Herald whose over-eager sub-editors misleadingly headlined the story ‘High school bans blogging’.
  • Scott must surely be heralded as the undisputed heavy weight champion of the action adventure spectacular.
  • The tip-off has been heralded as a major intelligence coup, but the detainee's shifting loyalties to al Qaeda over the years also underscore the challenges in battling the group. World Watch
  • Up at dawn and with no one else in sight, whether we were tracking a pride of lions or examining a column of ants, every minute heralded a new experience for both of us.
  • Stephen Friar speculates that the wyvern entered British heraldry as the standard of the Roman cohort and later appeared as the "burning dragon" of Cadwallader (the origin of the red dragon of Wales).
  • Last autumn the Sunday Herald revealed that the first national census of bed-blocking showed that in some areas 10% of hospital beds were occupied by patients who had nowhere else to go.
  • David Sanger heralded these talks as a sign that the Administration had fundamentally altered its approach to the North.
  • The Sunday Herald has also had its critics, most employed by rival publications.
  • The advent of mobile phones was heralded as a big leap in communication technology.
  • A mighty barking heralds your approach, and the visitor is engulfed by a tidal wave of Labradors, Westies and an Irish Water Spaniel who then jockey for position beside and over you on the sofas.
  • Primary syphilis is usually heralded by a single sore called a chancre, and if not treated, patients can develop a rash, fever, swollen lymph nodes and other symptoms. Reuters: Top News
  • Cissy Patterson, publisher of the Washington Times-Herald, had fresh flowers brought aboard at stopping places along the way.
  • There is no evidence, other than that within panels of the window itself, for the problems posed by the later incorporation of the heraldry of bishop and chapter within it.
  • Men are rising, putting on their himatia, ridiculing Timon; while the herald at a nod from the president declares the Ecclesia adjourned. A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life
  • The head of the indie label and his menagerie's techno most recently caught the eye of the heralded Terminal M label.
  • The two men looked through the crenel and saw a herald approaching from the Saracen lines. The Falcons of Montabard
  • Warm days and cool nights have heralded the disappearance of marine stingers for the season, making this the best time to kayak the far north.
  • Gene therapy has been heralded as the one, or only, way to cure some diseases.
  • The themes of heraldry, religion, astronomy, astrology and the natural world are expressed in murals, mosaics, stained glass, intricate woodwork and stone and marble carvings.
  • Murphy's mother's agony is laid bare in the gut-wrenching 911 call heralding the death of actress. AustralianIT.com.au | Top Stories
  • It was faultless, like an illustration from a book on heraldry, or an enormous butterfly pinned by a heartless collector.
  • A flash of lightning and a peal of thunder heralded torrential rain.
  • The turn of the century seemed to herald a turnaround for those living in the cradle of Christianity.
  • The changes included in the recent Criminal Justice Bill were unheralded, reversed government policy and were not announced to Parliament.
  • The LibDem leader told the Sunday Herald it would be dangerous to silence opposing points of view.
  • The message: The Herald-Examiner was taking off in its battle against the establishment paper.
  • ‘Gules’ is the traditional name for red in heraldry.
  • The official Institute of Heraldry blazon is ‘An elk's head caboshed proper.’
  • It is pretty much a heraldric wolf and Lauren's great spread of the pics shows it better. Day 18: Final days of UK filming
  • That first week in December always heralded in the dry, cooler and stronger north-easterlies, absolutely ideal conditions for yacht racing off Phuket's lovely shore-lines, coasts and surrounding islands.
  • The New York Times reflects on the silver leaf lettering and the significance of the granite block, a herald for what is to come.
  • The president's speech heralds a new era in foreign policy.
  • The district council said that responsibility for clearing watercourses lay with the owners of the land, but the Herald said it seemed no lessons had been learned.
  • This wonderful celebration to herald the start of summer promises to become an annual event.
  • Her heraldic device was distinguished from the many others sprinkled throughout the window by its larger scale and unusual format.
  • Therewith he spake to Hermes, his dear son: ‘Hermes, forasmuch as even in all else thou art our herald, tell unto the nymph of the braided tresses my unerring counsel, even the return of the patient Odysseus, how he is to come to his home, with no furtherance of gods or of mortal men. Book V
  • The event was deemed newsworthy, with this report appearing in the Taranaki Herald two days later.
  • Virtually unheralded, this relatively low-budget affair is a genuine sleeper - a surprise hit that pays off better than any number of more costly affairs.
  • Birds that overwinter in the northeastern U.S., like the red cardinal, are also the first to herald the onset of spring.
  • With his quiet colours he moderates the dazzle and grandeur found in the still-life pictures of his contemporary, which are as bright as heraldic blazonings.
  • I was advised by one of their heralds pursuivant that there is no official or legal way up.
  • It can cross-refer to the Herald's property pages, and then to a website with editorial on home improvements.
  • The series really hit a chord with viewers of all ages and has been heralded as good family entertainment.
  • Here were the main exhibits, gathered with infinite care and attention to their heraldic significance.
  • I remembered Christina Herald telling me how disappointed she was that some bar didn't have double bock.
  • The incipient spouses are of course excited by the adventure, the new life, heralded by marriage.
  • And with the notoriety of Masterton, I thought it only fitting I should read one of his more heralded works this summer to see what all the hype is about. Archive 2009-05-01
  • As the final battle between the sex-addicts and the neuters unfolds, head injuries multiply, heralding the orgiastic dawn of the neighborhood's sexual - and genuinely moral - awakening.
  • The faithless Mirabel had broken his engagement, and the plowboy was the herald of misfortune who brought his apology. I Say No
  • Thick clouds were gathering, heralding the approach of freezing rain and sleet.
  • Rolling Stone once heralded the cutting edge of gonzo journalism.
  • The heraldic embellishments of this family tree offer a particular interest in that the armorial blazonings are in accord with a decree of the French Royal Palaces and Parks of France
  • At the back of the old homestead a large shed was the former Taranaki Herald building, the first newspaper in New Plymouth.
  • a totally unheralded telegram that his daughter...died last night
  • Only an experienced needlewoman could do justice in words to such a variety of rimplings and crinklings, of pleatings and puckerings, of gaugings, rufflings, gofferings, and pin-tuckings as it is possible to find; though somebody with a knowledge of heraldry could perhaps convey a few of the designs in such terms as nebuly, raguly or dancetty (semée, he might add, of starfish proper). Try Anything Twice
  • Although crocuses and windflowers are tiny, they are brave little imps and often the first heralds of spring.
  • He looked cool and infinitely experienced, listening apparently with grave attention to the herald's formal announcement.
  • King Steven who usurped the English throne in 1096 carried the centaur as his heraldic symbol for that reason.
  • Thus it is difficult to prove that the heraldry is the origin of totemism, which is just as likely, or more likely, to have been the origin of savage heraldic crests and quarterings. Modern Mythology
  • In the center of each diamond was a small shield with what I took to be a heraldic device painted on it.
  • 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.
  • February 8, 1922, BOSTON HERALD: A "gruelling" examination, as the police employ the term, is one expected to put its recipient in the soup. Hollywood scandal: The nation's newspapers respond - BatesLine
  • Europe, that their business was considered as one of great honor, and that they were permitted to assume what may be called heraldic devices on their standards, to carry bright-feathered plumes, and to wear gold ornaments -- such decorations being only allowed to warriors who had, by their deeds in battle, been admitted into an institution which closely resembled that of knighthood; all others dressing in plain white cloths, woven from thread obtained from the aloe. By Right of Conquest Or, With Cortez in Mexico
  • | Reply | Permalink. gander mountain sporting goods tribadism brandy didder home loan loveland mortgage refinance ring of fire johny cash brad paisley celebrity bjs warehouse earnest rutherford tanya harding wedding video ciaran hinds emtek hardware bala shark lufthanza euless apartment gapping ass port huron times herald enema discipline punishment harpo productions aenema tia carrera nude Quote Of The Day
  • She began her journalism career with the Dayton Journal Herald as a copy girl.
  • When her studies took her into one of my fields, heraldry, she came to borrow books from my library.
  • Crikey can bring you a sneak preview from what is a wonderful piece that Herald editors will hopefully develop some spine over and run in tomorrow's paper.
  • The 1954 May Queen was Miss Audrey Howarth who was attended by her heralds, ladies, the Lord Chamberlain and other persons from her "Court."
  • A titanic crash of thunder heralds the return of the darkness and the onset of a truly biblical deluge.
  • He bathed with fresh water and reclad in fragrant linen the exquisite body, upon which faint discolouring patches already heralded the inevitable end. The Dop Doctor
  • Then he had a herald of arms, a physician, an apothecary, four minstrels, a keeper of his tents, an armourer and instructor of his wards, an instructor of his wardrobe of robes, a keeper of his chamber continually; he had also in his house a surveyor of York, a clerk of the greencloth. The Customs of Old England
  • The only real difficulty was for unlet tered yeomen to remember what the symbols on the gauges stood for-and this, indeed, was no more complicated a science than heraldry, which any hero-worshiping lad could rattle off in detail. The High Crusade
  • In a felicitation message, Khoda hoped that the festival would be herald of peace, tranquility and prosperity for the state. JK Governor,CM,Ministers,DGP & Political leaders greeted people on the occasion of Eid-ul- fitr
  • Promising signals herald the resurgence of a positive approach to the game.
  • More trivia: in heraldry, a vertical stripe on a flag is called a "pale" (the French tricolour is made up of three pales, for example). Flags
  • It frequently happens that God, prior to doing a great work of revival and renewal among a community of his people, raises up forerunners and heralds of the work.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy