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partition line

American  

noun

Heraldry.
  1. a plain or figured edge between two adjacent areas of an escutcheon, between an ordinary and the field of an escutcheon, or between two adjacent ordinaries.


Etymology

Origin of partition line

First recorded in 1710–20

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

I think that there are better chances for the administrative autonomy that we proposed rather than trying to draw a partition line which just doesn't exist.

From Time Magazine Archive

Under pressure of Mend�s' stubborn insistence on the 18th parallel as the partition line, Van Dong had moved from the 14th parallel to the 16th.

From Time Magazine Archive

Two hours later, 28 Vietnamese Skyraiders and 28 U.S. jets from Danang hit a regimental-sized barracks at Chaple, just north of the partition line.

From Time Magazine Archive

As an able writer has put it, "The birthday of a Christian was shifted from his baptism to his conversion, and in that change the partition line of two great systems is crossed."

From Fletcher of Madeley by Macdonald, Frederic W.

Mariana seems willing to help the Portuguese, by running the partition line one hundred leagues farther west than they claimed themselves.

From The History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic — Volume 2 by Prescott, William Hickling

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