orle

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orle

(ɔːl)
n
(Heraldry) heraldry a border around a shield
[C16: from French, from ourler to hem]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

orle

(ɔrl)

n.
a narrow band on a heraldic charge.
[1565–75; < Middle French: hem, edge, derivative of ourler to hem < Vulgar Latin *ōrulāre]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive ?
Althoff had four total all-conference players as George Orlet was sixth (84) and Connor Wilson was ninth (90).
In the week before the trial began, Jaynes entered sanctions against the company's previous lawyers Joseph Orlet, Adam Miller and T.R.
SERED CUTIS TINILY PAHAS ORLET RENAL Borgmann went on to explain that instead of reading each second letter of a word, there is the option of reading each third one, to create what is called a "trinade".
See also Christopher Orlet, From Breadbasket to Dustbowl, THE SPECTATOR (Apr.
A study by Carper, Orlet Fisher, and Birch, (2000) found that parental accounts of how much control they exerted over their children's food intake showed only a limited-to-zero relationship when compared to the child's reports of parental control and only the child's reports predicted dietary restraint or overeating tendencies.
The effect of portion sizes on food consumption has been studied, and experiments have shown that people will consume more total calories when the amount served to them increases (Rolls, Morris, and Roe, 2002; Orlet Fisher, Rolls, and Birch, 2003).
A new study led by Jennifer Orlet Fisher, director of the Family Eating Laboratory at Temple's Center for Obesity Research and Education, ook into consideration 152 pre-school aged children in the Head Start program who were served broccoli at snack time over a 7-week period.
In a recent issue of Central Europe Review, for example, Christopher Orlet condemned the anti-Semitism of "many individual priests" in today's Poland, singling out the reaction of Cardinal Jozef Glemp to the massacre at Jedwabne.
Jennifer Orlet Fisher, Ph.D., is quoted as saying: "On average, a 2-year-old's intake is 1,249 calories, which is 32% higher the estimated daily requirement" ("How to Prevent Obesity in Toddlers," March 1, 2006, p.