It is tethered to a tree, a rangy, brindled, flop-eared, devil-eyed billy that could have been a regimental mascot. |
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His brindled hide had lost its luster, the short hair mottled by patches of dried blood. |
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The bullmastiff is a tan, reddish brown, or brindled dog, with black on the face and ears. |
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Colour, as specified by the breed standard, is apricot, silver fawn, or brindled fawn and black. |
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Black, wolf-like, fawn or yellow, with white markings, or white with these colors, dappled, streaked or brindled. |
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Also clear fawn to biscuit color, reddish gray like the winter coat of a deer, also brindled or mottled with black. |
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White, black, gray, straw, ginger, gray-brown, brindled, piebald and speckled. |
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I have brindled carex with gold and green spikes of leaf all mixed up in the same clump. |
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These coats can be brindled, with black overlay or carrying a mantle of any hue. |
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A distinguishing feature in this dog is its brindled coat. |
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Light to dark deer red, more or less brindled, with or without mask. |
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The infant's ossature, the thin and brindled bones along whose sulcate facets clove old shreds of flesh and cerements of tattered swaddle. |
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Their coat is grey, brindled with white hairs, or is rusty. |
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In this area, there are great quantities of southern buffaloes, amazing great kudus, oryxes, elands, hartebeests, zebras, comon waterbucks, gorgeous wart hogs, brindled gnus and impalas. Their quality is exceptional. |
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There, in all its scruffiness, sat a gray brindled dog two steps away. |
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