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Lozengeshaped

Lozengeshaped denotes anything that has the outline or contour of a lozenge, also called a diamond. In geometry, a lozenge is a rhombus, a four‑sided figure with all sides equal and opposite sides parallel. Its interior angles come in opposite pairs, producing two acute angles and two obtuse angles. In many practical contexts the shape is the diamond used in playing cards or in tiling, which commonly has angles of 60 and 120 degrees, though other rhombic shapes are also described as lozenge-shaped.

Etymology: The word lozenge comes from the French losange, relating to the lozenge-shaped emblem used in heraldry;

Applications: The lozenge shape appears in graphic design, logos, surface ornamentation, jewelry, signage, and architecture. It

See also: lozenge, lozenge tiling, rhombus, diamond shape, heraldry.

the
English
adjective
lozengeshaped
follows
from
that
noun.
is
also
used
as
a
tile
in
the
lozenge
tiling
pattern,
a
well-known
approach
to
tiling
the
plane
with
congruent
rhombi.
The
term
is
commonly
employed
in
heraldry
to
describe
diamond-shaped
charges
or
motifs.