ANSWERS: 1
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The way I have always done it is that such weapons are assumed to be silver-plated. Silver is not a good metal for weapons unless you want to make something like a hollow-point bullet that expands on impact for a larger wound channel. Silver is too soft to hold an edge and would bend into a pretzel shape if you tried to make a bladed weapon out of it. As for alloy, that would be rather diluted; the part that damaged them would expose them to very little silver whereas a silver-plated weapon would expose the entire area where the weapon touched to pure silver in the same way that resting your hand on a box only exposes you to cardboard.
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