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Glossary |
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- Appliqué
- A
mode of flag manufacture in which one or more pieces
of cloth are stitched on the field to form the design.
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- Badge
- A
distinctive emblem added to an existing flag.
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- Break
out a flag/Break a flag
- To
unfurl a flag which has been rolled and tied in
such a way that a sharp tug on the halyard will
cause it to open out.
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- Bunting
- Strong,
loosely woven material used for making flags.
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- Burgee
- The
small distinguishing flag of a yacht club, usually
triangular or swallowtailed.
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- Canadian
pale
-
A pale in the shape of a square, as used
on the Canadian flag.
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- Canton
- The
upper corner of a flag next to the staff where a
special design, such as a union, appears.
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- Charge
- Any
object placed on the field of a flag or shield.
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- Cleat
- A
metal device with two arms, attached near the bottom
of a staff, to which halyards are attached.
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- Colour
- The
flag of a military unit.
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- Courtesy
Flag
- The
flag of a country being visited by a ship from a
different nation, as flown by that vessel.
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- Defacing
- Differencing
a flag by adding something to it, such as a charge,
a badge, or writing. Used especially on colonial
flags. Note that this term does not have the usual
meaning of "vandalizing" when used in
vexillology.
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- Dipping
- The
custom of lowering a flag briefly to honour an important
person, another vessel, etc.
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- Dress
Ship
- To
decorate a vessel with flags for a special occasion.
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- Ensign
- A
generic term for flag, especially associated with
naval flags of nationality (civil ensign, naval
reserve ensign, etc.) and by extension in British
usage with distinguishing flags of government services
on land.
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- Fan
- A
semicircular patriotic decoration in bunting of
flag design and/or colours.
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- Finials
- The
ornament at the top of a staff above the truck.
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- Field
- The
background (predominant colour) of a flag.
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- Fimbration
- A
narrow line separating two other colours in a flag.
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- Fly
- The
free end of a flag, farthest from the staff. The
term is also used for the horizontal length of the
flag.
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- Gaff
- A
spar from which a flag is hoisted, jutting from
the mizzenmast of a shop or from a staff on land.
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- Grommet
- A
hole reinforced by stitching or a metal ring, usually
found at both ends of the heading, through which
clips attached to the halyards pass.
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- Ground
- The
background of a flag.
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- Halyard
- A
rope used to hoist and lower a flag.
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- Hoist
- That
part of a flag nearest the staff; also a group of
signal flags to be flown together; also a synonym
for width.
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- House
Flag
- The
distinguishing flag of a commercial firm, flown
especially at sea; sometimes used in reference to
the personal flag of the owner of a yacht or home.
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- Jack
- A
small flag flown under certain circumstances at
the prow of a vessel, usually a warship.
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- Proportions
- The
relative size of a flag, expressed in terms of its
width to length ratio, e.g., 1:2.
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- Ratio
- The
relationship of a flag's width to its length; e.g.
France is 2:3; Germany is 3:5; Russia is 1:2.
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- Rope
and Toggle
- A
method of hoisting a flag by means of a rope sewn
into its heading, which has a wooden toggle at the
top and a loop of rope at the bottom that fasten
to their opposites at the ends of the halyard.
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- Semaphore
- A
system of signaling by means of two flags held in
various positions.
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- Signal
Flag
- Any
of a number of flags of recognized (and usually
simple) design, such as the International Code of
Signals, used to transmit messages, especially at
sea.
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- Sleeve
- A
tube of material along the hoist of a flag through
which the staff is inserted, used especially for
a parade flag or colour.
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- Staff
- A
cylindrical piece of wood, plastic or metal to which
a flag is attached or from which it is hoisted.
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- Substrate
- The
fabric or material on which a design is printed.
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- Swallowtailed
- Having
a large triangular section cut from the fly end,
a characteristic of pennants and of war ensigns
of Northern Europe.
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- Truck
- A
device at the top of a staff below the finial which
provides, usually through a pulley, for the raising
and lowering of the halyards.
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- Yardarm
- A
bar attached horizontally to a staff on the mizzenmast
of a ship or on shore in imitation of naval usage.
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- Vexillology
- The
scientific study of the history, symbolism, and
usage of flags or, by extension, any interest in
flags in general.
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