a horse marked with black and white coat is known as a PieBald
A horse that is white any other colour exept black is called skewbald :)
A black and white 'spotty' horse could be any number of colors. It could be an Appaloosa or Appaloosa marked horse, or it could be a pinto marked horse depending on how big the 'spots' are and what breed or cross it may be.
A horse, but with black and white striped coat.
A piebald horse is a horse with irregular black patches on a gray coat (which may appear white). There are two other colorings to distinguish a piebald from: Paint horses and Skewbald. A Skewbald horse has similar patches, but they are brown. A Paint horse is the opposite - they seem to have white patches on a solid coat.
The term "palomino" refers to a horse with a golden coat and a white mane and tail. For a horse with black and white patches, the correct term is "pinto" or "paint" horse. These horses have coat patterns of large patches of white and another color, which can include black, brown, or chestnut.
It is very common for horses to have a coat that is all black. It is also possible for all brown or all white coats.
a horse marked with black and white coat is known as a PieBald
Skewbald is a spotted horse with any base coat color other than black. So a skewbald horse could be bay and white, brown and white, chestnut and white, palomino and white, et cetera...just NOT black and white.
Skewbald is a spotted horse with any base coat color other than black. So a skewbald horse could be bay and white, brown and white, chestnut and white, palomino and white, et cetera...just NOT black and white.
No, for a horse to be truly black it is very uncommon. To be considered fully black the coat has to be black. The eyes are usually brown. There are no sun spots or white spots on their skin. Their coats must be wholly black to be considered a true black horse.
The coat of arms of Moscow is a warrior on a white horse with a spear that fights a black dragon.
This depends on what you mean by 'milk white'. Most horses are grey (black skin under a grey or white coat.) and several breeds fall into this color range, such as the Lippizaner, and the Camargue. The 'Camarillo white horse' (White coat and pink skin underneath) is a true white horse breed and is very rare. Other breeds can produce white horses but it is rare.