Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Here the trail is marked by at red diagonal cross on a white background.
Sometimes the figure is standing on a globe inscribed with a diagonal cross.
Simply, the crest is a blue shield, with a silver diagonal cross.
Mississippi also displays the diagonal cross in the upper left corner of its flag.
The Scottish flag is blue with two white diagonal crosses (called a saltire).
The central feature of the Company's coat of arms is a large chequered diagonal cross.
The club's first strip was a navy blue and white strip with a yellow diagonal cross.
This is represented by the diagonal cross, or 'saltire', on Scotland's flag.
Right now she flew the Russian Navy ensign, pure white with a blue diagonal cross.
The coat of arms of Cameroon features two fasces which form a diagonal cross.
Animal origin has been proposed for the wall markings, although many appear to be in regular patterns, including circles and diagonal crosses.
Blood poured from a huge seven-inch gash that formed a diagonal cross against his upper backbone.
The saltire is a diagonal cross, often called Saint Andrew's cross.
There is an arms that is wrongly associated with the name: a red shield with a white diagonal cross.
In the second example on the right, the crown consists of diagonal cross bracing across the length of the colonnade.
The blue shield and silver diagonal cross is the St Andrew's Cross.
A blue flag with a red saltire (diagonal cross), to indicate that a lapped driver must pull in to the pits.
Above his head was a huge shield bearing the Trencavel coat of arms, with two heavy metal pikes forming a diagonal cross behind it.
In later years these workhorses were very dilapidated and had diagonal cross bracing on each bulkhead to reduce body sway.
A hoist of three flags were now flying-the uppermost was a white flag with a blue diagonal cross on it-number two.
It was either red (for anti-aircraft troops) or yellow (for field troops), with a black lined white diagonal cross.
According to popular legend, Athelstaneford is where the original Scottish saltire - the white diagonal cross on a sky blue background - was first adopted.
Labels can include hazard symbols such as the European Union standard black diagonal cross on an orange background, used to denote a harmful substance.
The first symbols that are formed by children are the circle, the upright cross, the diagonal cross, the rectangle, and other common forms.
One modern variation found in Scotland is the 'continuous' whistle board, comprising a white rectangle with the 'W' below a diagonal cross.