Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Chevron

Chev′ron

(shĕv′rŭn)
,
Noun.
[F., rafter, chevron, from
chévre
goat, OF.
chevre
, fr. L.
capra
she-goat. See
Cheveril
.]
1.
(Her.)
One of the nine honorable ordinaries, consisting of two broad bands of the width of the bar, issuing, respectively from the dexter and sinister bases of the field and conjoined at its center.
2.
(Mil.)
A distinguishing mark, above the elbow, on the sleeve of a non-commissioned officer’s coat.
3.
(Arch.)
A zigzag molding, or group of moldings, common in Norman architecture.
Chevron bones
(Anat.)
,
The V-shaped subvertebral arches which inclose the caudal blood vessels in some animals.

Webster 1828 Edition


Chevron

CHEVRON

,
Noun.
In heraldry, an honorable ordinary, representing two rafters of a house meeting at the top.

Definition 2024


chevron

chevron

English

Noun

chevron (plural chevrons)

  1. A V-shaped pattern; used in architecture, and as an insignia of military or police rank, on the sleeve
  2. (heraldry) A wide inverted V placed on a shield.
  3. (chiefly Britain) One of the V-shaped markings on the surface of roads used to indicate minimum distances between vehicles.
    • 2009, Jamie Dunn, Truckie has a point, Sunshine Coast Daily Online, June 13, 2009.
      I told you that in fact they were called chevrons and it was an exercise by the transport department to teach us to stay two chevrons behind the car in front.
  4. A guillemet, either of the punctuation marks “«” or “»”, used in several languages to indicate passages of speech. Similar to typical quotation marks used in the English language such as “” and “”.
  5. An angle bracket, either used as a typographic or a scientific symbol.
  6. (informal) A háček, a diacritical mark that may resemble an inverted circumflex.
    • 1953, William James Entwistle, Aspects of Language (Faber and Faber), page 107
      It is pertinent to remember, however, that one of the greatest phoneticians, Jan Hus, used diacritics (in the form of points, which have later become chevrons in his own language), and that his alphabet is the most satisfactory for eastern Europe, since it has been officially adopted by the languages which use the Latin script.
    • 1976, Stephen J. Lieberman, The Sumerian Loanwords in Old-Babylonian Akkadian (Harvard Semitic Studies, issue 22; published by Scholars Press for Harvard Semitic Museum), page 66
      The symbol ř (“r” with a chevron) is used for a phoneme which sounds like Czech ř (as in Dvořák), i.e. a voiced alveolar flap. The presence of the chevron has no effect on the index numbers used in transliteration; cf. 2.058.

Synonyms

Translations

External links

Verb

chevron (third-person singular simple present chevrons, present participle chevroning, simple past and past participle chevroned)

  1. To form or be formed into chevrons
    • 1963, Lucien Victor Gewiss, "Process and Devices for Chevroning Pliable Sheet Material," US Patent 3397261 , page 14:
      ...the sheet to be chevroned locks itself into the furrow.
    • 1983, Allen Sillitoe, The Lost Flying Boat, ISBN 0246122366, page 118:
      Bull fixed the claw under a batten, strained like a sailor at the capstan, shirt off, arms chevroned by elaborate tattoos.
    • 2003, Felice Picano, A House on the Ocean, a House on the Bay, ISBN 1560234407, page 55:
      Earlier, in glaring winter daylight, I'd first noticed thin lines chevroning off the edge of each eye into the taut skin of his cheeks...

French

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin *capriō, capriōnem, from *capreus, cf. also Latin caprone. Ultimately from caper (goat).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʃə.vʁɔ̃/

Noun

chevron m (plural chevrons)

  1. rafter
  2. (heraldry) chevron