English edit

Etymology edit

French verdoyer (to become green). See verdant.

Adjective edit

verdoy (not comparable)

  1. (heraldry) Charged with leaves, fruits, flowers, etc.; said of a border.
    • 1693, Richard Blome, The Art of Heraldry, in two parts ... the second edition, page 21:
      Gules a Bordure Argent charged with Verdoy of Trefoils slipped proper, that is Vert.
    • 1804, Alexander Nisbet, A system of heraldry, speculative and practical, page 172:
      SCOTT of Hedderwick, a younger son of Scott of Logie, argent, a fesse crenellé, between three lions' heads erased, gules; within a bordure of the last, verdoy of six flower-de-luces of the first.
    • 1827, Encyclopaedias, Encyclopaedia Edinensis: or, Dictionary of arts, sciences, and literature, page 163:
      Quarterly; 1st and 4th, the arms of France and England, quarterly; 2d, arms of Scotland; and 3d, those of Ireland; the whole within a border compone, argent and gules, the first charged with verdoy of roses of the second []

Further reading edit