The municipality s heraldic language be described thus : Per pale Or a lion rampant sinister gules armed and langued azure and gules a house argent masoned sable with two windows and one door of the same.
12.
The shield is surrounded by a chain of beads Azure, placed on two sugar canes proper in saltire, surmounted by a mural crown Argent masoned Sable, consisting of four turrets with four battlements each.
13.
The community s arms might be described thus : Argent a gurgle glass gules palewise between two oak leaves vert palewise, in base a mound of the third surmounted by a tunnel portal masoned of the first with a tunnel sable.
14.
The castle is made of stone ( " masoned " ) and has some windows, a portcullis ( castle entry point ) and flags ( " vanes " ) and all these objects are coloured red ( " gules " .)
15.
Clearly the Porthaus accepted this interpretation of their name, since the blazon of their seal ) was : A lion rampant and in chief two towers crenellated, masoned and inflamed, one to the dexter and the other to the sinister.
16.
It is true, as Harvey Araton pointed out a few days ago, that attention must be paid to the Knicks as knowledgeable and resourceful warriors who just might have Masoned and Oakleyed the Rockets better than the Magic did in this series.
17.
However, current practice already allows the modifying the floor plan according to the customer's requirements and selecting the surfacing material, e . g . a personalized brick facade can be masoned even if the load-supporting elements are timber.
18.
The badge of office is " A tower of three castellations Vert masoned Argent, the dexter castellation Azure charged of a saltire Argent the sinister castellation Argent charged of a cross Gules, all ensigned of the Crown of Scotland Proper . ".
19.
"Quarterly 1 and 4, gules, a castle or masoned and ajour?azure; 2 and 3 argent a lion purpure armed, langued and crowned or, grafted in point argent, a pomegranate proper seeded gules, supported, sculpted and slipped vert.
20.
Furthermore, the glacis prevents attacking cannon from having a clear shot at the walls of a fortress, as usually these cannot be seen until the glacis is crossed and the ditch, bounded on either side by the smooth, masoned scarp and counterscarp, is reached.