Young and winter adults, more or less spotted with yellow and blackish-brown above, and grayish-white below, with indistinct streaks on the breast.
In winter, they are plain gray above and white below.
Stem= solid, fibrillose, ochraceous at the top, white below, gradually enlarged into a thick bulbous base.
Flesh= lemon-yellow under the pellicle, white below.
Stipe= fibrillose, stuffed or hollow, lilac tinged at the top, white below.
Warbler to Sparrow size; tree-creeping habits; black and ashy blue above; white below.
Color usually pearly gray above, white below in adult Gull and Terns; Jaegers and many young Gulls are dark.
Its plumage is extremely variable, showing all the intergradations from a uniform sooty blackish to the typical adult plumage of a grayish above, and a white below, with a large breast patch of rich chestnut.
Cinereous above, white below; the colour varies from pure ashy grey to grey with an isabelline tinge.
The fur is soft and long, rufous brown or fawn colour above, white below, the colours being less sharply distinguished than in G.
Beak often long and slender, usually black above, white below.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "white below" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.