See the related link
The escutcheon is; Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or armed and langued Azure
On an english/French coat of arms, there are only lions not leopards. As French was the language of English government for a few centuries after the Norman Conquest of 1066, and in a French Blazon a lion, without further description, is always rampant; a lion passant guardant - one that is walking forward and facing outward toward the viewer - is always called a léopard. A lion rampant guardant is a léopard lionné, and one passant but with its head in profile is a lion léopardé. The terms describe the animal's posture, not his species. Whatever the beast is called, the heraldic lion or leopard should always have at least a hint of a mane.
like a dictionary
A plural apostrophe doesn't look like anything. There's no such thing as a plural apostrophe.
Whenever a sentence requires commas that would make the series commas seem redundant or confusing the correct punctuation is the semi-colon, e.g., Portland, Birmingham, and Washington can be written using the series comma but if the Portland needed to be specified as to the state and the Birmingham is in England and the Washington was not the District of Columbia, then it would look like this: Portland, Oregon; Birmingham, England; and Washington North Carolina.
like you study or look at it so much that you know it like the back of your hand.....u dont have to look at it to read it off
a lion
See the related link for a look.
the meaning : to identify a nobleman in battle. a coat of arms being an heraldic reference to a person/family and used only by that person or family. i.e, the fluer de leys of the prince of wales, the three Lions rampant of the King of England.
See the link below.
You can view the Hanson Coat of Arms Here: http://www.4crests.com/hacoofarhafa3.html hope this helps. Mike
you will need to google that in order to get a true picture.
Coats of Arms are associated with particular people or families of prominence, such as royalty and nobles, not with a surname.
Considering Chen is a Chinese name, there would not have a coat of arms. Coats of arms are a European invention and apply predominantly to Great Britain, France, Germany, and Italy - and then mostly to the nobility.
Its typical sun worship, just like all the other coat of arms. Look at the nazi's, soviets, english, us coat of arms. Its all sun worship.
Like this. To see a better picture go look for it yourself
The coat of arms that Henry VIII used intermittently throughout his reign featured, a fleur-de-lis and a dragon.
Well that would depend on which Bowman bloodline you are asking about, there are four main lines that each have their own coat of arms, so if you could expand on which line you are asking about, your question could be better answered