Trefoil
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Trefoil (from Latin trifolium, three-leaved plant, French trèfle, German Dreiblatt and Dreiblattbogen) is a term in Gothic architecture given to the ornamental foliation or cusping introduced in the heads of window-lights, tracery, panellings, etc., in which the center takes the form of a three-lobed leaf, one of the earliest examples being in the plate tracery at Winchester (1222 - 1235); see Quatrefoil.
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Trefoil is also:
- a common name for some kinds of clover, which have three-foiled leaves.
- In mathematical knot theory, a trefoil refers to a trefoil knot.
- the name of the symbol used to indicate radioactivity
- a variation of the solitaire card game La Belle Lucie.