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pale$57313$ - ترجمة إلى الهولندية

TRIBAND FLAG WHERE THE CENTRE BAND IS WIDER THAN THE OUTTER BANDS
Canada pale; Canadian Pale
  • [[Flag of Canada]], for which the term is named

pale      
adj. bleek;zwak; wit
dark brown         
COLOR
List of terms associated with the color brown; Light brown; Pale Sandy Brown; Dark brown; Brown (color); Brown (colour); Pullman brown; Reddish brown; Brown colour; Brownish; 964B00
donkerbruin
sky blue         
  • original (and ongoing)]] name for this colour.
  • Bright blue sky with clouds
COLOUR OF THE UNCLOUDED SKY AT NOON REFLECTING OFF A METALLIC SURFACE
Sky Blue; Sky-Blue; Sky Blue (colour); Sky-blue; Skyblue; Deep sky blue; Light Sky Blue; Deep sky blue (color); Deep Sky Blue; Sky blue (colour); Bianchi Green; Celeste (colour); Sky (color); Light sky blue; Mizudori; Sora-iro; Sora iro; Japanese pale blue
hemelsblauw

تعريف

pale
I
adj.
devoid of color
1) deathly pale
2) to go, turn pale
3) pale with (rage)
II
v.
1) (d; intr.) ('to become devoid of color') to pale at ('to pale at the sight of blood')
2) (d; intr.) ('to become less important') to pale before, beside (everything paled before the possibility of war)
3) (d; intr.) ('to fade') to pale into (to pale into insignificance)
III
n.
prescribed area
beyond, outside the pale

ويكيبيديا

Canadian pale

In heraldry and vexillology, a Canadian pale is a centre band of a vertical triband flag (a pale in heraldry) that covers half the length of a flag, rather than a third as in most triband designs. This allows more space to display a central image (common charge). The name was suggested by Sir Conrad Swan, Rouge Dragon Pursuivant (a heraldic office in Britain), and first used by Queen Elizabeth II as Queen of Canada proclaiming the new Canadian flag on 28 January 1965.

The classic Canadian pale is a square central panel occupying half of a flag with 1:2 proportions. However, vexillological usage applies it to any central band that is half the width of the flag, even if this renders it non-square. The term Canadian pale is also used for flags which do not originate in Canada. The 3:5 proposed flag of Taiwan and the 7:11 flag of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines are both described as having a Canadian pale.

The Canadian pale is a popular feature of sub-national, civic and personal heraldry from Canada developed after 1965. A few examples can be found in the flag of Yukon, the flag of the city of Edmonton, Alberta, the arms of Athabaska University, and in the arms of numerous individual recipients.

The term is sometimes used in an even looser sense to refer to any flag with a larger central panel, irrespective of whether or not it covers half the flag. By this looser description, the flag of Norfolk Island (stripes in a ratio of 7:9:7) and the flag of Iowa (ratio legally undefined, but usually the central stripe is less than twice that of the outer stripes) are sometimes considered to have a Canadian pale.

By analogy, any flag which has a central horizontal stripe that is half the height of the flag is sometimes said to have a Spanish fess.