Whiteness; anything that is white.
The white color in coats of arms, intended to represent silver, or, figuratively, purity, innocence, beauty, or gentleness; -- represented in engraving by a plain white surface.
Made of silver; of a silvery color; white; shining.
White or silver (heraldic). (Wood, Margaret. The English Medieval House, 409)
the heraldic color silver, often represented in white.
The heraldic color (tincture) of silver/white.
Silver, but nearly always shown as white.
Silver (normally shown as white)
English term used for silver, based on Latin term “Argentum."
Silver, sometimes shown as white
a metal tincture used in heraldry to give a silvery appearance
lustrous gray; covered with or tinged with the color of silver; "silvery hair"
French word for both silver and money. Argentum in Latin. Its abbreviation Ag is used as the chemical symbol for silver.
Silver, or sometimes white. one of the seven basic heraldic tinctures, and specifically, one of the two metals.
Silver, usually represented as white
The heraldic term for silver (Valentine 71). See related terms: Gules, Sable
White. The silvery color on coats of arms. In the arms of princes it is sometimes called lune, and in those of peers pearl. It represents purity, innocence, beauty or gentleness.
Latin term for silver "argentum."
In heraldry, argent is the tincture of silver, and belongs to the class of light tinctures, called "metals". It is very frequently depicted as white and usually considered interchangeable with it. In engravings and line drawings, regions to be tinctured argent are either left blank, or may be indicated with the abbreviation ar. in them.