rompu
English
Adjective
rompu (not comparable)
Usage notes
- In heraldry, broken ordinaries (especially chevrons) can be represented artistically and described in blazon in various ways:
- Guillim's 1611 Display illustrates a chevron like this in the arms of the Salt family, blazoned "rompé or rompu".
- Pimbley's 1908 Dictionary has this as "chevron fracted"; Mistholme says it's found in Holme's Fifteenth Century Book in the arms of Fyndarne.
- Woodward and Burnett's 1892 Treatise has chevrons like this as "chevron rompu", borne by Beaumont...
- ...and this ("fracted", borne by Rozier de Linage). Gough has this as "fracted" or "broken".
- The 1850 Freemasons' Quarterly Magazine has a chevron like this labelled "fracted or removed of one joint".
- Chevrons broken like this are found in recent illustrations of French coats.
- Henry Gough, James Parker (1894) A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry, page 109:
- There are various forms of broken chevrons. But the terms do not appear very distinctly defined by heralds, and the actual examples are but few. We find the terms fracted, disjoint, bruised, or debruised (fr. brisé), and rompu or downset, the last term, to all appearance, being a barbarism derived from the French dauncet, which would be equivalent to dancetty.
Argent, a chevron debruised between three crosses botonny fitchy sable—BARDOLPH, Stafford.
Argent, a chevron debruised sable, between three cross-crosslets fitchée of the last—GREENWAY [Glover's Ordinary].
Per pale argent and sable, a chevron bruised at the top, and in base a crescent counterchanged—ALEXANDER, Kinlassie.
... a chevron debruised by a fesse charged with a crescent, all between three annulets.... HEDLEY, Newcastle-on-Tyne.
Azure, a chevron disjoint or broken in the head or—BROKMALE.
Per fesse gules and sable, a chevron rompu countercharged—ALLEN, Sheriff of London, 18o Jac. I.
Or, a chevron rompu between three mullets sable—SALT, Yorks.
In the margin are given illustrations of one or two forms found in books [corresponding to images 1, 2, and 4 above], but no ancient examples have been observed. With the French engravers the chevron brisé is generally drawn in a similar manner to [the fourth image above], though the two portions are often still further apart, so as not to touch at all. Rompu and failli seem to be used by them when the sides of the chevron are broken into one or more pieces.
Esperanto
French
Pronunciation
Audio (file) Audio (CAN) (file)
Participle
rompu (feminine rompue, masculine plural rompus, feminine plural rompues)
- past participle of rompre
Further reading
- “rompu”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Anagrams
Irish
Etymology
From Middle Irish rempu, rempo, rempa, rompu, rompoibh, replacing earlier remaib, from Old Irish roaib.
Scottish Gaelic
Derived terms
See also
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