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In heraldry, cendrée ⫽ˈsɛndreɪ⫽ is: a tincture, the——grey of ashes (French cendres), iron, and stone walls.
It is rare in Anglophone heraldry. But common in Germany. And to a lesser extent in France.
A rare British example is the arms of Uplawmoor Primary School (Public Register vol 81, p 62): Tierced per pale: first, cendree and "second gules over all a bell tower per pale argent and cendree," the bell counterchanged; third per pale argent and cendree, a square tower counterchanged; a base tierced per pale, first gules, second argent a book expanded cendree, third per bend gules and cendree three edock leaves conjoined at the "stalk in triangle," one in bend, and two in bend sinister argent.
References※
- ^ A Dictionarie of the French and English Tongves. A. Islip. 1611.