Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
There, not ten feet from her face, hung the gonfalon.
The arms of the Netherlands have changed since 1815, but the depiction on the gonfalon has not.
This symbol stands out on the green drape of the gonfalon.
"If you're that terrible woman from Gonfalon, you don't need me.
At her back lay the dark red gonfalon.
These arms appeared on a gold gonfalon and on the seal as well.
The gonfalon has long been used for ecclesiastical ceremonies and processions.
The Gonfalon and modern emblem was approved by the city council on September 11, 1996.
She pointed at the boar's head gonfalon.
Why didn't the Hechizera of Gonfalon do her own work?
King Casmir had failed to notice a twitching of the gonfalon.
"Gonfalon" is a poetic way of referring to the pennant that both clubs battled for.
"You are that woman in the story, the Hechizera of Gonfalon.
"Didn't you ever hear the story of the Hechizera of Gonfalon?"
At the end of the room a dark red gonfalon, embroidered with a Tree of Life, hung from the beams to the floor.
Today every Italian comune (municipality) has a gonfalon sporting its coat of arms.
William of Normandy conquered England under the papal gonfalon.
A gonfalone or gonfalon is a vertically hung banner emblazoned with a coat of arms.
A gonfalon can include a badge or coat of arms, or ornamentations of fancy design.
Baseball's Sad Lexicon, 1910 poem referring to a baseball championship pennant as a "gonfalon"
We may have to pass the torch along ... Do you have the French word gonfalon?
The shield of the Rutgers coat of arms appears on the university gonfalon, and is at the head of all processions.
The curtain hung now like a gonfalon, a constant reminder of the night Karl had pulled it down and taken it with them to the barn.
It is suspended from a crossbar which is attached horizontally to a long vertical pole (see the article Gonfalon for a picture).
(Somewhere he had heard of the wild story of the Hechizera of Gonfalon!
The name derives from the Italian word gonfanone, or gonfanon.
The Society publishes a biannual journal Heraldry in Canada and a quarterly newsletter, Gonfanon.
The gonfalon, gonfalone (from the early Italian confalone), or "gonfanon" (from French heraldry) is a type of heraldic flag or banner, often pointed, swallow-tailed, or with several streamers, and suspended from a crossbar.
The difference between a gonfanon with long tails and a standard is that a gonfanon displays the device on the non-tailed area, and the standard displays badges down the whole length of the flag.