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Lozenge (shape)

A lozenge (/ˈlɒzɪn/[1] LOZ-inj; symbol: ), often referred to as a diamond, is a form of rhombus. The definition of lozenge is not strictly fixed, and the word is sometimes used simply as a synonym (from Old French losenge) for rhombus. Most often, though, lozenge refers to a thin rhombus—a rhombus with two acute and two obtuse angles, especially one with acute angles of 45°.[2] The lozenge shape is often used in parquetry (with acute angles that are 360°/n with n being an integer higher than 4, because they can be used to form a set of tiles of the same shape and size, reusable to cover the plane in various geometric patterns as the result of a tiling process called tessellation in mathematics) and as decoration on ceramics, silverware and textiles. It also features in heraldry and playing cards.

Lozenge
In UnicodeU+25CA LOZENGE (◊, ◊)
Related
See alsoU+2311 SQUARE LOZENGE
U+29EB BLACK LOZENGE
U+25C8 WHITE DIAMOND CONTAINING BLACK SMALL DIAMOND

Symbolism edit

The lozenge motif dates from the Neolithic and Paleolithic period in Eastern Europe and represents a sown field and female fertility.[3] The ancient lozenge pattern often shows up in Diamond vault architecture, in traditional dress patterns of Slavic peoples, and in traditional Ukrainian embroidery. The lozenge pattern also appears extensively in Celtic art, art from the Ottoman Empire, and ancient Phrygian art.[4]

The lozenge symbolism is one of the main symbols for women in Berber carpets.[5] Common Berber jewelry from the Aurès Mountains or Kabylie in Algeria also uses this pattern as a female fertility sign.

In 1658, the English philosopher Sir Thomas Browne published The Garden of Cyrus, subtitled The Quincunciall Lozenge, or Network Plantations of the Ancients, in which he outlined the mystical interconnection of art, nature and the universe via the quincunx pattern. He also suggested therein that ancient plantations were laid out in a lozenge pattern.[6]

Lozenges appear as symbols in ancient classic element systems, in amulets, and in religious symbolism. In playing cards, the symbol for the suit of diamonds is a lozenge.

Applications edit

Calculator edit

 
Lozenge (subtotal) key on a Walther Multa 32 calculator keyboard, c. 1970

On equipment, especially calculators, the lozenge is used to mark the subtotal key. It is standardized in ISO 7000[7] as symbol ISO-7000-0650 ("Subtotal"). In a similar fashion, the square lozenge (⌑), part of the BCDIC character set, was often used on tabulation listings to indicate second level totals in banking installations in the 1960s.[8]

Computing edit

The APL programming language uses the lozenge, called diamond, as statement separator.

Camouflage edit

 
A Fokker D.VII shows a four-color lozenge camouflage

During the First World War, the Germans developed lozenge camouflage (German: Lozenge-Tarnung).[9] This camouflage was made up of colored polygons of four or five colors. The repeating patterns often used irregular four-, five- and six-sided polygons, but some contained regular rhombi or hexagons. Because painting such a pattern was very time-consuming, and the paint added considerably to the weight of the aircraft, the pattern was printed on fabric. This pre-printed fabric was used from 1916 until the end of the war, in various forms and colours.

Flags and emblems edit

 
Flag of Brazil

Several flags feature lozenges, including the Flag of Brazil, which contains a yellow lozenge at the center. One official flag of Bavaria is entirely made of blue and white lozenges.

Several emblems feature lozenges, including the Emblem of Uttarakhand, one of the twenty-eight states of India.

Heraldry edit

The lozenge in heraldry is a diamond-shaped charge, usually somewhat narrower than it is tall. A mascle is a voided lozenge—that is, a lozenge with a lozenge-shaped hole in the middle—and the rarer rustre is a lozenge containing a circular hole. A field covered in a pattern of lozenges is described as lozengy; a similar field of mascles is masculy.

Mathematics edit

In axiomatic set theory, the lozenge refers to the principles known collectively as the diamond principle.

Medicine edit

Cough tablets have taken the name lozenge, based on their original shape. According to the Oxford English Dictionary the first use of this sense was in 1530.

In Finland, the lozenge is associated with salmiak, through Apteekin Salmiakki. Thus, the lozenge is commonly called salmiakkikuvio "salmiak shape". The pattern is often used even if the candy is not actually lozenge-shaped.

Military insignia edit

Finland edit

In Finnish military ranks, the lozenge is found in the insignia of conscript officer students (one lozenge) and conscript officer candidates (two lozenges).

United States edit

 
WWII "ruptured duck" Honorable Discharge Emblem lozenge

To implement 10 U.S.C 773, the Secretary of the Navy has prescribed the following distinctive mark for wear by members of military societies which are composed entirely of honorably discharged officers and enlisted personnel, or by the instructors and members of duly organized cadet corps.

"The distinctive mark will be a diamond, 3+12 inches long by 2 inches wide, of any cloth material. A white distinctive mark will be worn on blue, green, or khaki clothing; and a blue distinctive mark will be worn on white clothing."[citation needed]

"The distinctive mark will be worn on all outer clothing on the right sleeve, at the point of the shoulder, the upper tip of the diamond to be 14 inch below the shoulder seam."[citation needed]

The lozenge is used in the Army, Marine Corps, and Air Force on the insignia of their respective first sergeants. It is also used in the cadet programs of Army ROTC, Army and Marine Corps Junior ROTC, and the Civil Air Patrol as rank insignia of cadet officers corresponding to the military pay grades of O-4 to O-6 (Cadet Major, Cadet Lieutenant Colonel, and Cadet Colonel).

Modal logic edit

In modal logic, the lozenge expresses that there is "possibility". For example, the expression   expresses that it is possible that   is true.

Traffic signs edit

 
Bicycle lane

The lozenge (technically a mascle) can be used on public roadways in the United States and Canada to mark a specific lane for a particular use. The lane will usually be painted with a lozenge at a regular interval, and signage will be installed to indicate the restrictions on using the lane. This marking is most often used to denote high-occupancy vehicle lanes or bus lanes, with accompanying signage reading "◊ HOV LANE" or "◊ BUS LANE" and giving the requirements for a vehicle to be accepted. Prior to 17 January 2006, lozenges could also be used to mark bicycle-only lanes, often in conjunction with a bicycle icon.[10]

In Japan and South Korea, a lozenge marked in white paint on the road indicates an upcoming uncontrolled pedestrian crossing. Similarly, in New Zealand a lozenge marked in white paint on the road may be placed to indicate an upcoming pedestrian crossing. [11]

In the United Kingdom, lozenges are used on tramway signs. For instance, speed limits are shown as a black lozenge on a white background, containing the speed limit in kilometres per hour.[12]

 
This road has priority

In many parts of Europe, traffic from the right has right of way at all junctions, unless otherwise stipulated. A yellow lozenge is used (typically on major routes) to indicate that the rule does not apply to the current route.

A hollow lozenge is also used in the signage of waterways[where?] to identify a hazard. A cross is placed in the lozenge, dividing it in four, to mark a restricted area.[13]

Square lozenge (Pillow symbol) edit

A similar shape, , with concavely curved edges instead of straight lines and oriented such that its edges lie up, down, left and right, is defined in the Miscellaneous Technical Unicode block as a square lozenge. It is used in travel agencies, where it appears on the specialist keyboards used with booking terminals, where it has the familiar name, the pillow symbol.[14] In the 1960s, it was used in banking and for other purposes.[8]

Encodings edit

In Unicode, the lozenge is encoded in multiple variants:

  • U+22C4 DIAMOND OPERATOR (⋄, ⋄, ⋄)
  • U+25CA LOZENGE (◊, ◊)[15]
  • U+2662 WHITE DIAMOND SUIT[a]
  • U+2666 BLACK DIAMOND SUIT (♦, ♦)[b]
  • U+27E0 LOZENGE DIVIDED BY HORIZONTAL RULE
  • U+27E1 WHITE CONCAVE-SIDED DIAMOND
  • U+29EB BLACK LOZENGE (⧫, ⧫)
  • U+2B27 BLACK MEDIUM LOZENGE
  • U+2B28 WHITE MEDIUM LOZENGE
  • U+2B2A BLACK SMALL LOZENGE
  • U+2B2B WHITE SMALL LOZENGE
  • U+25C6 BLACK DIAMOND
  • U+25C7 WHITE DIAMOND
  • U+2756 BLACK DIAMOND MINUS WHITE X
  • U+20DF  ⃟ COMBINING ENCLOSING DIAMOND

The lozenge is present in DOS code page 437 (at character code 4)[16] and Mac-Roman (at character 215 = 0xd7). The AMS-LaTeX command for the lozenge is \lozenge ( ).

Other related unicode characters include:

  • U+2311 SQUARE LOZENGE
  • U+2726 BLACK FOUR POINTED STAR
  • U+2727 WHITE FOUR POINTED STAR

In IBM 026 punched card code the pillow-shaped square "lozenge" is (12-8-4).[17][8]

Imagery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The term 'white' is perhaps a misnomer, since colour is font choice. A more accurate description might be 'outline'.
  2. ^ The term 'black' is perhaps a misnomer, since colour is font choice. A more accurate description might be 'solid'.

References edit

  1. ^ "lozenge". Macmillan English Dictionary for Advanced Learners.
  2. ^ "Lozenge - from Wolfram MathWorld". Mathworld.wolfram.com. 2015-07-22. Retrieved 2015-08-11.
  3. ^ Welters, Linda (1999). Folk dress in Europe and Anatolia: beliefs about protection and fertility. Berg Publishers. pp. 16–21. ISBN 1-85973-282-8.
  4. ^ Sams, Gilbert (1994). The early Phrygian pottery. Science Press. p. 151. ISBN 0924171189.
  5. ^ Berber Carpets of Morocco: The Symbols Origin and Meaning, by Bruno Barbatti, ACR Edition, ISBN 978-2-86770-184-9.
  6. ^ Moore, Charles (1988). The Poetics of Gardens. The MIT Press. p. 161. ISBN 0262631539.
  7. ^ ISO 7000 - Graphical symbols for use on equipment
  8. ^ a b c Mackenzie, Charles E. (1980). Coded Character Sets, History and Development (PDF). The Systems Programming Series (1 ed.). Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-201-14460-4. LCCN 77-90165. (PDF) from the original on May 26, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  9. ^ . Wwiaviation.com. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 2015-08-11.
  10. ^ "Introduction - MUTCD 2009 Edition - FHWA". United States Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2018-05-20.
  11. ^ "Sharing The Road With Pedestrians". NZ Transport Agency. Retrieved 2022-07-08.
  12. ^ "Know Your Traffic Signs" (PDF). Department for Transport. 2007. Retrieved 2018-05-20.
  13. ^ . marine-movers.com. Archived from the original on 2017-07-27.
  14. ^ Apollo for Travel Professionals (PDF). Galileo International LLC). 2007. p. 1.4. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  15. ^ "Geometric Shapes" (PDF). Unicode.org. Retrieved 2015-08-11.
  16. ^ Valtanen, Esko (1990). DOS-OPAS. Teknolit. p. 649. ISBN 952-90-1220-9.
  17. ^ "The IBM 026 Key Punch". Columbia University. 2003-12-31. Retrieved 2018-05-20.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of lozenge at Wiktionary

lozenge, shape, redirects, here, other, uses, diamond, disambiguation, redirects, here, extended, play, mujuk, lozenge, symbol, often, referred, diamond, form, rhombus, definition, lozenge, strictly, fixed, word, sometimes, used, simply, synonym, from, french,. redirects here For other uses see Diamond disambiguation redirects here For the extended play see Mujuk A lozenge ˈ l ɒ z ɪ n dʒ 1 LOZ inj symbol often referred to as a diamond is a form of rhombus The definition of lozenge is not strictly fixed and the word is sometimes used simply as a synonym from Old French losenge for rhombus Most often though lozenge refers to a thin rhombus a rhombus with two acute and two obtuse angles especially one with acute angles of 45 2 The lozenge shape is often used in parquetry with acute angles that are 360 n with n being an integer higher than 4 because they can be used to form a set of tiles of the same shape and size reusable to cover the plane in various geometric patterns as the result of a tiling process called tessellation in mathematics and as decoration on ceramics silverware and textiles It also features in heraldry and playing cards LozengeIn UnicodeU 25CA LOZENGE amp loz amp lozenge RelatedSee alsoU 2311 SQUARE LOZENGE U 29EB BLACK LOZENGE U 25C8 WHITE DIAMOND CONTAINING BLACK SMALL DIAMOND Contents 1 Symbolism 2 Applications 2 1 Calculator 2 2 Computing 2 3 Camouflage 2 4 Flags and emblems 2 5 Heraldry 2 6 Mathematics 2 7 Medicine 2 8 Military insignia 2 8 1 Finland 2 8 2 United States 2 9 Modal logic 2 10 Traffic signs 3 Square lozenge Pillow symbol 4 Encodings 5 Imagery 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksSymbolism editThe lozenge motif dates from the Neolithic and Paleolithic period in Eastern Europe and represents a sown field and female fertility 3 The ancient lozenge pattern often shows up in Diamond vault architecture in traditional dress patterns of Slavic peoples and in traditional Ukrainian embroidery The lozenge pattern also appears extensively in Celtic art art from the Ottoman Empire and ancient Phrygian art 4 The lozenge symbolism is one of the main symbols for women in Berber carpets 5 Common Berber jewelry from the Aures Mountains or Kabylie in Algeria also uses this pattern as a female fertility sign In 1658 the English philosopher Sir Thomas Browne published The Garden of Cyrus subtitled The Quincunciall Lozenge or Network Plantations of the Ancients in which he outlined the mystical interconnection of art nature and the universe via the quincunx pattern He also suggested therein that ancient plantations were laid out in a lozenge pattern 6 Lozenges appear as symbols in ancient classic element systems in amulets and in religious symbolism In playing cards the symbol for the suit of diamonds is a lozenge Applications editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lozenge shape news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Calculator edit nbsp Lozenge subtotal key on a Walther Multa 32 calculator keyboard c 1970 On equipment especially calculators the lozenge is used to mark the subtotal key It is standardized in ISO 7000 7 as symbol ISO 7000 0650 Subtotal In a similar fashion the square lozenge part of the BCDIC character set was often used on tabulation listings to indicate second level totals in banking installations in the 1960s 8 Computing edit The APL programming language uses the lozenge called diamond as statement separator Camouflage edit nbsp A Fokker D VII shows a four color lozenge camouflage Main article Lozenge camouflage During the First World War the Germans developed lozenge camouflage German Lozenge Tarnung 9 This camouflage was made up of colored polygons of four or five colors The repeating patterns often used irregular four five and six sided polygons but some contained regular rhombi or hexagons Because painting such a pattern was very time consuming and the paint added considerably to the weight of the aircraft the pattern was printed on fabric This pre printed fabric was used from 1916 until the end of the war in various forms and colours Flags and emblems edit nbsp Flag of Brazil Several flags feature lozenges including the Flag of Brazil which contains a yellow lozenge at the center One official flag of Bavaria is entirely made of blue and white lozenges Several emblems feature lozenges including the Emblem of Uttarakhand one of the twenty eight states of India Heraldry edit Main article Lozenge heraldry The lozenge in heraldry is a diamond shaped charge usually somewhat narrower than it is tall A mascle is a voided lozenge that is a lozenge with a lozenge shaped hole in the middle and the rarer rustre is a lozenge containing a circular hole A field covered in a pattern of lozenges is described as lozengy a similar field of mascles is masculy Mathematics edit In axiomatic set theory the lozenge refers to the principles known collectively as the diamond principle Medicine edit Main article Throat lozenge Cough tablets have taken the name lozenge based on their original shape According to the Oxford English Dictionary the first use of this sense was in 1530 In Finland the lozenge is associated with salmiak through Apteekin Salmiakki Thus the lozenge is commonly called salmiakkikuvio salmiak shape The pattern is often used even if the candy is not actually lozenge shaped Military insignia edit Finland edit In Finnish military ranks the lozenge is found in the insignia of conscript officer students one lozenge and conscript officer candidates two lozenges United States edit nbsp WWII ruptured duck Honorable Discharge Emblem lozenge To implement 10 U S C 773 the Secretary of the Navy has prescribed the following distinctive mark for wear by members of military societies which are composed entirely of honorably discharged officers and enlisted personnel or by the instructors and members of duly organized cadet corps The distinctive mark will be a diamond 3 1 2 inches long by 2 inches wide of any cloth material A white distinctive mark will be worn on blue green or khaki clothing and a blue distinctive mark will be worn on white clothing citation needed The distinctive mark will be worn on all outer clothing on the right sleeve at the point of the shoulder the upper tip of the diamond to be 1 4 inch below the shoulder seam citation needed The lozenge is used in the Army Marine Corps and Air Force on the insignia of their respective first sergeants It is also used in the cadet programs of Army ROTC Army and Marine Corps Junior ROTC and the Civil Air Patrol as rank insignia of cadet officers corresponding to the military pay grades of O 4 to O 6 Cadet Major Cadet Lieutenant Colonel and Cadet Colonel Modal logic edit In modal logic the lozenge expresses that there is possibility For example the expression P displaystyle lozenge P nbsp expresses that it is possible that P displaystyle P nbsp is true Traffic signs edit nbsp Bicycle lane The lozenge technically a mascle can be used on public roadways in the United States and Canada to mark a specific lane for a particular use The lane will usually be painted with a lozenge at a regular interval and signage will be installed to indicate the restrictions on using the lane This marking is most often used to denote high occupancy vehicle lanes or bus lanes with accompanying signage reading HOV LANE or BUS LANE and giving the requirements for a vehicle to be accepted Prior to 17 January 2006 lozenges could also be used to mark bicycle only lanes often in conjunction with a bicycle icon 10 In Japan and South Korea a lozenge marked in white paint on the road indicates an upcoming uncontrolled pedestrian crossing Similarly in New Zealand a lozenge marked in white paint on the road may be placed to indicate an upcoming pedestrian crossing 11 In the United Kingdom lozenges are used on tramway signs For instance speed limits are shown as a black lozenge on a white background containing the speed limit in kilometres per hour 12 nbsp This road has priority In many parts of Europe traffic from the right has right of way at all junctions unless otherwise stipulated A yellow lozenge is used typically on major routes to indicate that the rule does not apply to the current route A hollow lozenge is also used in the signage of waterways where to identify a hazard A cross is placed in the lozenge dividing it in four to mark a restricted area 13 Square lozenge Pillow symbol editA similar shape with concavely curved edges instead of straight lines and oriented such that its edges lie up down left and right is defined in the Miscellaneous Technical Unicode block as a square lozenge It is used in travel agencies where it appears on the specialist keyboards used with booking terminals where it has the familiar name the pillow symbol 14 In the 1960s it was used in banking and for other purposes 8 Encodings editIn Unicode the lozenge is encoded in multiple variants U 22C4 DIAMOND OPERATOR amp diam amp Diamond amp diamond U 25CA LOZENGE amp loz amp lozenge 15 U 2662 WHITE DIAMOND SUIT a U 2666 BLACK DIAMOND SUIT amp diamondsuit amp diams b U 27E0 LOZENGE DIVIDED BY HORIZONTAL RULE U 27E1 WHITE CONCAVE SIDED DIAMOND U 29EB BLACK LOZENGE amp blacklozenge amp lozf U 2B27 BLACK MEDIUM LOZENGE U 2B28 WHITE MEDIUM LOZENGE U 2B2A BLACK SMALL LOZENGE U 2B2B WHITE SMALL LOZENGE U 25C6 BLACK DIAMOND U 25C7 WHITE DIAMOND U 2756 BLACK DIAMOND MINUS WHITE X U 20DF COMBINING ENCLOSING DIAMOND The lozenge is present in DOS code page 437 at character code 4 16 and Mac Roman at character 215 0xd7 The AMS LaTeX command for the lozenge is lozenge displaystyle lozenge nbsp Other related unicode characters include U 2311 SQUARE LOZENGE U 2726 BLACK FOUR POINTED STAR U 2727 WHITE FOUR POINTED STAR In IBM 026 punched card code the pillow shaped square lozenge is 12 8 4 17 8 Imagery edit nbsp Lozenge nbsp Phrygian art 7th Century BC nbsp Cucuteni Trypillian figurine with sown field pattern nbsp Bush Barrow Lozenge British Bronze Age nbsp Ushak carpet Ottoman Empire nbsp Khatha sacred Yantra amulet from Thailand nbsp Hindu Star of Lakshmi nbsp Muslim Rub el Hizb nbsp Magic squares were used as amulets nbsp Talisman design from an 18th century French grimoire nbsp Arabic manuscript China 16th Century nbsp Charlemagne coins denier or denaro c 771 793 nbsp Belitung shipwreck Tang dynasty c 825 nbsp Traditional sown field pattern of Western Ukraine nbsp Armenian tapestry nbsp Rongorongo proto writing possible lunar calendar calculating device nbsp Epigonation in Eastern Christianity nbsp Greek Classical elements nbsp In Ecclesiastical heraldry lozenge shape is reserved for women nbsp Women Airforce Service Pilots Badge nbsp Philippine Air Force roundel nbsp Mitsubishi logo nbsp Renault logo nbsp SV Werder Bremen crest nbsp National flag of Belarus with sown field pattern nbsp National flag of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines nbsp Lozenge shaped coat of arms is reserved for women nbsp Ace of diamonds nbsp Diamond vault in German architecture nbsp Rune shaped designs five lozenges cross and heart on the gable of Ledringhem s church nbsp Sown fields in an open field system of farmingSee also editParallelepiped 3 D Lozenge Petrosomatoglyph lozenges as symbols in prehistoryNotes edit The term white is perhaps a misnomer since colour is font choice A more accurate description might be outline The term black is perhaps a misnomer since colour is font choice A more accurate description might be solid References edit lozenge Macmillan English Dictionary for Advanced Learners Lozenge from Wolfram MathWorld Mathworld wolfram com 2015 07 22 Retrieved 2015 08 11 Welters Linda 1999 Folk dress in Europe and Anatolia beliefs about protection and fertility Berg Publishers pp 16 21 ISBN 1 85973 282 8 Sams Gilbert 1994 The early Phrygian pottery Science Press p 151 ISBN 0924171189 Berber Carpets of Morocco The Symbols Origin and Meaning by Bruno Barbatti ACR Edition ISBN 978 2 86770 184 9 Moore Charles 1988 The Poetics of Gardens The MIT Press p 161 ISBN 0262631539 ISO 7000 Graphical symbols for use on equipment a b c Mackenzie Charles E 1980 Coded Character Sets History and Development PDF The Systems Programming Series 1 ed Addison Wesley Publishing Company Inc p 99 ISBN 978 0 201 14460 4 LCCN 77 90165 Archived PDF from the original on May 26 2016 Retrieved August 25 2019 German Lozenge Camoflage Wwiaviation com Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 2015 08 11 Introduction MUTCD 2009 Edition FHWA United States Department of Transportation Retrieved 2018 05 20 Sharing The Road With Pedestrians NZ Transport Agency Retrieved 2022 07 08 Know Your Traffic Signs PDF Department for Transport 2007 Retrieved 2018 05 20 Aids to Navigation Explained marine movers com Archived from the original on 2017 07 27 Apollo for Travel Professionals PDF Galileo International LLC 2007 p 1 4 Retrieved 1 June 2020 Geometric Shapes PDF Unicode org Retrieved 2015 08 11 Valtanen Esko 1990 DOS OPAS Teknolit p 649 ISBN 952 90 1220 9 The IBM 026 Key Punch Columbia University 2003 12 31 Retrieved 2018 05 20 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of lozenge at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lozenge shape amp oldid 1218422496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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