Designer Chris Levine's blue monochrome portrait shows the monarch wearing a crown, pearls and an ermine cape. |
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In bygone days many stoats were slaughtered to provide skins for ermine robes. |
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Do they wear coronets and ermine and incorporate rejection slips in their coats of arms? |
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Some ermine appropriate the burrows of mice or ground squirrels and adapt them for their own use. |
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These women wear haute couture clothes of silk and ermine set off with expensive pearl jewelry. |
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Of course they could be wearing ermine stoles and top hats for all you know and care. |
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The apple small ermine moth causes more or less serious defoliation at the tips of branches of apple trees. |
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He is clad in a jeweled robe fringed with ermine and his mustache and beard are immense and golden. |
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Predators of erethizontids include mustelids such as martens, minks, wolverines, ermine, weasels, and fishers. |
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He had long, flowing green hair and a long, brambly beard, wore a tight tunic, and had a mantle that was sewn with the finest white ermine fur. |
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One teacher thought the caterpillars might belong to silk ermine moths, but we're not sure. |
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The biggest enemies of the Arctic hare are the fox, the polar bear, the wolverine, and the ermine. |
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Other princes and princesses fly a standard with the royal arms in an ermine border. |
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The barry field and ermine lion are from the heraldry of the Cecils, and Hatfield has been the seat of this branch of the family ever since. |
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The robe is trimmed with ermine, which is the white winter coat of the stoat in northern regions of Europe. |
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He says that the caterpillars are ermine moths, which weave silk tents over bird cherry and other fruit trees. |
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The fjords around Ammassalik Island are brimming with narwhals, seals, ermine, arctic wolves and dozens of other cold-comfort creatures. |
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It was ordained that no ecclesiastic, but dignified clergymen, should wear vair, gray, or ermine. |
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Some of the greatest declines were suffered by autumn rustic, ghost moth, and white ermine. |
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Freshly installed spouse Sophie, meanwhile, has only just stopped short of draping herself across the bonnets of sports cars in ermine and tiara. |
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I do think, however that a ballot on the suitability of some newly ermined people would debar some before the ermine was purchased. |
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On this throne sat a very distinguished-looking man dressed in a royal blue velvet robe trimmed with ermine over his tuxedo. |
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This type of frontlet is worn as a headdress, usually with a trailer of ermine skins. |
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The following morning Estelle awoke, still wrapped in her ermine winter robe. |
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They have a special cape called a mozzetta which is trimmed with ermine. |
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Her accession ceremony may not have been a coronation, but the new Queen looked sufficiently grand in an elegant white gown, tiara, and crimson and ermine robe. |
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Larsson should have been adorned in ermine and sable in Andalucia. |
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What lady does not relish the plush touch of ermine on her cheek, the airy intricacies of a panel of lace, or the cloud-like embrace of a velveteen settee? |
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The family crest is a field azure, chevrony doubly cottised, which means the field is blue, with very thin lines of ermine forming the shape of a chevron. |
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Vikka is quick to identify the tracks of wolverine, fox and ermine. |
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New Stockport Mayor Ken Holt made news in May by refusing to don the robes of his office during a swearing in ceremony because the robes were trimmed with ermine. |
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But in a gender reversal, it is Francesca, painted seductively in her ermine coat, and not the painted men in armor, who saved the castle three hundred years ago. |
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The buff ermine moth is so called because of its buff colouring. |
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Estelle watched with a gleam in her eye as the Duke of Gloucester marched down the aisle wearing a rich red velvet cape with a plush ermine collar over flawless white. |
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The countess deftly steered the lifeboat, a resolute and unlikely vision in her ermine and pearls. |
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It may be a visual pun on her surname, since the Greek for ermine or stoat is galay. |
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The image was created by bird cherry ermine moth caterpillars, which experts say are doing no harm to the trees. |
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The name ermine is often, but not always, used for the stoat in its pure white winter coat, or the fur thereof. |
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There is also a design called ermine inspired by the winter coat of the stoat and painted onto other furs, such as rabbit. |
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Cecilia Gallerani is depicted holding an ermine in her portrait, Lady with an Ermine, by Leonardo da Vinci. |
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James V ordered a purple and ermine bonnet from tailor Thomas Arthur of Edinburgh to fit inside the crown. |
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The flag was created to replace the traditional ermine plain standard, considered too aristocratic and royalist. |
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The ermine, or stoat, as an animal became the badge of John IV at the end of the 14th century. |
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Before his father's death in 1399, Henry bore the arms of the kingdom, differenced by a label of five points ermine. |
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After his father's death, the difference changed to a label of five points per pale ermine and France. |
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Besides buffalo, elk, and deer hides, Mandans also used ermine and white weasel hides for clothing. |
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Mints are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species, including buff ermine moths. |
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Exotic furs such as fox, marten, grey squirrel and ermine were reserved for aristocratic elites. |
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A pair of gorgeous buckskin shaps, embroidered up the sides and adorned with innumerable ermine skins. |
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Other common weasels in this area are the least weasel and the short-tailed weasel or ermine. |
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The ermine was also written about by Leonardo as a symbol of her purity. |
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The infestation was blamed on the yponomeuta padella, the caterpillar of the orchard ermine moth. |
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Nearly all were Korean and Chinese Ageniaspis fuscicollis wasps, parasites of the apple ermine moth, received during the summer. |
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From Chinese apple orchards and lone trees, Pemberton gathered dry, mummified remains of ermine moth caterpillars. |
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Caterpillars of the bird-cherry ermine moth colonised trees at the attraction and created the sight. |
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Apple ermine moths lay egg masses on 1-3 year-old branches from mid to late summer. |
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Early that summer, pupae of apple ermine moths harboring wasp larvae were rounded up in Shanxi Province, China. |
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County moth recorder Tom Tams said the caterpillars were most likely the larval stage of some of the less common ermine moths. |
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The bird-cherry ermine moth has several rows of black dots on its forewing, and a wingspan of 16-25 mm. |
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His charger wore a blanket of enameled crimson scales and gilded crinet and chamfron, while Lord Tywin himself sported a thick ermine cloak. |
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As Duke of York, Henry used the arms of his father as king, differenced by a label of three points ermine. |
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A cap of crimson velvet is shown within the crown, with the cap's ermine lining appearing at the base of the crown in lieu of a torse. |
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Usual animal sources for fur clothing and fur trimmed accessories include fox, rabbit, mink, beavers, ermine, otters, sable, seals, coyotes, chinchilla, raccoon, and possum. |
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According to popular traditions, Anne of Brittany was hunting with her court when she saw a white ermine who preferred to die than to cross a dirty marsh. |
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Apart from the ermine flag, Breton historic banners include the Kroaz Du, a white flag with a black cross, the perfect negative of the Cornish flag. |
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Peacham goes on to preach that men and women should follow the example of the ermine and keep their minds and consciences as pure as the legendary ermine keeps its fur. |
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The few native land mammals in Greenland include the polar bear, arctic fox, reindeer, arctic hare, musk ox, collared lemming, ermine, and arctic wolf. |
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Local wildlife experts reckoned the natural phenomenon, which looked like a spooky Halloween scene, was the work of the caterpillar of the birdcherry ermine moth. |
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Yponomeuta Padella, or ermine moth caterpillars weave an intricate web over a roadside hawthorn hedge and speed sign in Catherington near Portsmouth yesterday. |
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Ermine never let any one be condescending to her, and conducted the conversation with her usual graceful good breeding. |
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Only fragments of Stane Street and Ermine Street, the Roman roads which crossed the county, remain. |
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Ermine had been used in Brittany long before, and there is no clue about its origin. |
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The main town in the region in Roman times was Lincoln, at the confluence of the Fosse Way and Ermine Street. |
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Ermine were also valued by the Tlingit and other indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast. |
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A Roman road, named Akeman Street, has been documented from Ermine Street near Wimpole through Cambridge, Stretham and Ely to Brancaster through Denver. |
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The Rev Mr E Powell, who used to go to Tregaron for his fishing holidays, used a grey partridge feather to dress one of his evening fly patterns called the Ermine Moth. |
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