Relatively small changes to name elements can remove the appearance of vulgarity.Polish: In Polish, i/y/j switches are common, and the use of accents is inconsistent. Northshield lets us display unregistered arms on our profile pages anyways. While the Spanish occasionally used per saltire divisions for marshalled designs, they more commonly used quarterly divisions for this, so we do not consider fields divided per saltire as potentially marshalled designs.Old Irish Gaelic, Middle Irish Gaelic,Scottish Gaelic, Manx Gaelic, Oghamic Irish, Pictish, etc.Other East Slavic languages, like Ukranian and Belorussian, follow similar patterns to Russian; they must generally be documented individually.Spanish, Catalan, Portuguese, Basque, etc.There are examples of attested given names and bynames that are claims to magical abilities or other superhuman abilities. What happened is the CoH said, "We're cutting down on steps from period practice, so we're not going to let people register Chinese dragons anymore because they were never found in anything resembling heraldry from any culture."The registration of armory is just another way someone who plays in the SCA can learn something about an art from the medieval period. However, if there is evidence that the element or pattern could not have been in use before 1600, such as documentation for a name in 1615 which specifically says that it was coined in that year, then it will not be allowed.Acute accents may be written or omitted, as long as they are used consistently.
In some cases, these rules or the Appendices are sufficient documentation. If the arrangement of either group is not listed below, then they are not in a standard arrangement and no DC can generally be given for arrangement between the two designs.For example, the arms of a branch may not be granted as an augmentation, because they contain a laurel wreath, which cannot be registered to an individual.Other animate postures may be given substantial difference between comparable creatures on a case by case basis.The methods by which children would difference their arms from their parent's arms were sometimes known as cadency steps, and the standards which developed for these differences are collectively called "cadency".
Changes to independent charge groups may give multiple distinct changes. Names that are not substantially different in sound and/or appearance are said to be in conflict. To do this, the submitter must demonstrate the relationship through legal documents or through attestation of relationship from the individual whose armory is already registered.In armory with a divided field, there are two potential situations. Elements which would be considered a step from period practice under the Core Style rules may only be used under the Individually Attested Pattern rules when documented as being used in the time and place as the rest of the submission.Certain kinds of borrowed names were rarely used. If the answer is yes for both, then the arrangements are comparable and there is a DC between them for change to arrangement. Some people in the modern world have middle names derived from given names.