In technical analysis, a chart pattern which occurs when the trading range formed...
A small flag; a pennon. The narrow pennant, or long pennant (called also whip or coach whip) is a long, narrow piece of bunting, carried at the masthead of a government vessel in commission. The board pennant is an oblong, nearly square flag, carried at the masthead of a commodore's vessel.
a small triangle indicating a halfway point in a rapid market move. The pennant should be preceded by an almost vertical market move, called the pole. The pole will be the distance from a breakout from a support or resistance or geometric pattern to the triangular part of the pennant. In the case of a pennant pointing up, the pole should be attended by high volume.
The knight's small triangular banner, usually attached to the end of his lance, generally bearing his heraldic device. Contrast this with the banner of a knight bannerette responsible for leading more than his household or conroi into battle. See also Chronique: The Journal of Chivalry #11.
A chart pattern resembling a pointed flag, with the point facing to the right, which shows a diminishing variance of price.
a flag longer than it is wide (and often tapering)
a long flag; often tapering
a continuation pattern, just like the triangle
a Flag with converging, rather than parallel, boundary lines
a pattern where the stock has narrowing highs and lows as it moves sideways, converging more or less on the centerline between the highs and lows
a small symmetrical triangle that begins wide and converges as the pattern matures (like a cone)
long tapering four-sided flag with the wider vertical end known as the head beside the mast and the narrower end known as the fly away from the mast; the top and bottom sides taper uniformly towards the centre line
Any nautical flags that taper to a point and used for identification.
A security's chart pattern that forms a triangle, which is called a pennant. Usually this indicates that the security's price either will rise or fall as the apex is reached.
A continuation chart pattern that is similar to flag, except that it is more horizontal and resembles a small symmetrical triangle.
A long streamer-like pennon
(or pennon), any triangular or roughly triangular flag.
point-and-figure chart projection
The Commissioning pennant or Masthead pennant is a pennant (also spelt "pendant") flown from the masthead of a warship. The pennant reflects the fact that the ship is a ship of war, and is flown until the ship is decommissioned. It is generally taken to signify the commissioned status of the warship, although of course it is the captain of the ship who holds the commission, and not the ship.
The Church Pennant as used by the Royal Navy, European Navies and Commonwealth Navies is a broad pennant combination of the English Flag at the hoist and the Dutch National Flag in the fly originating from the Anglo-Dutch wars of the late 17th century on Sundays to indicate that a service was in progress and a ceasefire existed between the waring nations, hence the origin of the pennant. It is flown on Ships and Establishments (Bases) during religious services.