Ivory
Ivory is a hard white substance that forms the tusks of some animals, such as elephants and walruses. It is highly valued for its beauty and durability, which has unfortunately led to illegal poaching and significant threats to these animals.
qurtz
Animals that have ivory include elephants, walruses, narwhals, and hippopotamuses. Ivory is a hard, white material that makes up the tusks or teeth of these animals. Commercial trade in ivory is heavily regulated due to conservation concerns.
They are long(can grow to 6 feet!)and white. Though sometimes their tusks can break in a fight. The tusks are actually teeth.
The elephant had 6 tusks
stop being racist
Ivory is a white, hard material, made from tusks and teeth of animals. Ivory is often used as a material in art or in manufacturing, and is a very popular material.
brown, with white bone tusks
No, "ivory" is not a proper noun; it is a common noun that refers to a hard, creamy-white substance made from the tusks and teeth of animals, particularly elephants. Proper nouns are specific names of people, places, or organizations and are usually capitalized, while common nouns like "ivory" refer to general items or concepts.
Ivory is not a stone. Please check the related link.
Primarily white, but with a yellowish tinge to it. (Think elephant tusks)
The insoluble white substance formed when potassium chloride is mixed with silver nitrate is silver chloride. This reaction is a precipitation reaction where silver chloride forms a white solid precipitate due to the insolubility of silver chloride in water.