Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The present shape of the boat and the more heraldically correct arms date from 1899.
Arms have to be heraldically correct to qualify for registration, which remains voluntary.
A colour on a metal or vice-versa is heraldically correct.
It might heraldically be described thus: In sable two bars argent.
It was a wonderful vehicle, blazing with golden light, heraldically coloured.
These are heraldically represented by the 14 notches on the diagonal band across the shield.
The latter would have been heraldically identical to the old Waldgravial arms.
The current colours - including the heraldically unusual blue for a lion's tongue - have been in use since at least 1605.
Since 1976 the dolphin has been depicted naturalistically rather than heraldically.
The town's previous flag had been green and white, but it had not been heraldically correct.
The tower was included as a charge in the arms on the community's wishes, although in heraldically simplified form.
There is a full colour version and nine heraldically correct official versions exist for single-colour reproduction.
In 1961 it was improved heraldically and newly awarded by the governmental executive committee of Lüneburg.
It would be blazoned heraldically as follows:
Upon the official granting of the arms on 27 December 1927, the cross's tincture was changed because it was "not heraldically correct".
The standard arms are described heraldically as follows: field, or, with three chabots, gules.
He opened his eyes and saw a strange heraldically coloured tree loaded with yellow fruits and silver leaves.
(A loggerhead, heraldically, means a leopard's head).
An earlier town symbol, a cloverleaf (or heraldically, a trefoil), may explain the charge on the inescutcheon.
The shield features a Union Flag in chief, with a crown (known heraldically as an antique crown) at its centre.
Battenberg's civic coat of arms might heraldically be described thus: Per pale sable and argent.
But the agreement contained a typo, and saying "three towers well ordered", which heraldically would mean two towers above and one below.
A cross bottony which is heraldically "counterchanged" occurs on the flag of Maryland.
More often, the Tudor rose is depicted as a double rose, white over red and is always described, heraldically, as "proper".
Statutory emblem is made up by a central crowned Czech lion looking heraldically left and holding in its forepaws large "G" letter.