trippant
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From trip + -ant, alteration of tripping, present participle of trip. Compare Scots trippand (“tripping”), present participle of trip (“to skip, go nimbly, trip”).
Adjective
trippant (not comparable)
- (heraldry) Represented as walking or trotting, usually with one of the forehooves lifted while the remaining three are on the ground.
- 1828, William Berry, Encyclopaedia Heraldica Or Complete Dictionary of Heraldry:
- [Borne by the late 1737.] Richard Davies, Esq. of Kent, 1833.] Davison, gu. a stag, trippant, or.
- 1830, Thomas Robson, The British Herald, page 82:
- Crest, a buck roe-bucks, trippant, or, as many quatrefoils gu.
- 1844, John Burke, Bernard Burke, Encyclopædia of Heraldry, page 349:
- a buck trippant within an orle […] three bucks trippant […]
Derived terms
- countertrippant
- trippant-counter
References
- “trippant”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
French
Adjective
trippant (feminine trippante, masculine plural trippants, feminine plural trippantes)
- (slang) trippy