Daggers Sentence Examples

daggers
  • He gathered the three daggers that survived.

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  • It hangs from the rooftops like daggers nearly touching the ground.

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  • She darted to her feet and threw one of her daggers.

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  • They carried double-edged swords and short daggers for use hand to hand, the steel of which was hardened b y being buried underground; their defensive armour was a light Gallic shield or a round wicker buckler, and greaves of felt round their legs.

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  • They were armed in separate companies with bows and arrows, spears, daggers and shields, and the officers carried battle-axes and maces.

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  • Stone mace-heads are found in the earliest cemeteries, together with flint implements that may be the heads of lances, &c, and thin leaf-shaped daggers of bronze.

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  • In the crannog of Lisnacroghera, county Antrim, iron swords, with sheaths of thin bronze ornamented with scrolls characteristic of the Late Celtic style, iron daggers, an iron spear-head 162 in.

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  • In addition to the bow, the Persians carried short lances and short daggers.

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  • A remarkable confirmation of the theory that the Bronze Age culture came from the East is to be found in the patterns of the arms, which are distinctly oriental; while the handles of swords and daggers are so narrow and short as to make it unlikely that they would be made for use by the large-handed races of Europe.

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  • They were too deep and knotted to be from the daggers or the whip or the hand strikes of his master and his master's men.

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  • Sister Claire bitched at the weatherman and anyone else she could blame for 'this horrible stuff ' while shooting daggers at Jerome Shipton and pretending Fred O'Connor hadn't been born.

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  • Become crushed into shards or melt as I speak rusty hooks, jeweled daggers, dark candy.

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  • These bronze Age people made flint and bronze daggers - often placed in their graves.

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  • Even copper daggers - where they occur in Beaker graves - were typically concealed.

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  • Earliest daggers were made of green jade with a blade three inches wide.

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  • They are attracted by the Gothic imagery, the images of Teutonic knights in shining armor, of swords and daggers and shields.

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  • They provide medieval replica weaponry, armor, and collectibles includes daggers, spears, axes, shields, and helmets.

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  • Daggers, swords, eyeballs and skulls are all, of course, welcome additions to your wardrobe.

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  • European dogwood, Cornus sanguinea, was prized for its extremely hard wood, which was used for making shuttles and handles for various tools, undoubtedly including daggers.

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  • In World 13 in a house just outside of Lumbridge, collect the Iron Daggers to resell for profit.

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  • Using your smithing skills, create lots of daggers and sell them to the shops.

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  • Small trinkets and lockets, along with rock and roll charms like daggers or skulls, blend effortlessly together and capture a whole new bohemian fashion style that is deeply alluring and chic.

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  • If you have a friend, boyfriend or brother willing to dress as Macbeth, you can both wear full costumes and have bloody hands and carry daggers, having just killed the king and his guards.

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  • They are sometimes rendered in the Gothic cross style and may feature stylized depictions of barbed wire and daggers.

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  • Thorns, banners, daggers, and more go well with traditional rose blossoms when you want one with an edge.

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  • Incorporating imagery like barbed wire or daggers with your Gothic cross tattoo invokes a message of mystery, anger and pain.

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  • She'd thought his wall of swords, daggers, axes, and other medieval weapons were for ceremony.

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  • As he pulled on the last of his clothes and crossed to his armory, a small, black velvet box nestled between two daggers drew his attention.

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  • Sasha was armed with two daggers and lowered himself into a fighting stance.

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  • He shot daggers at her as Elisabeth said, "I would love to."

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  • Darian looked around, expecting to see her again beneath the shade of an apple tree, as beautiful as she was deadly with the daggers she wore at her waist.

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  • Steadying her breathing, Jenn gripped her daggers and waited.

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  • Two daggers perched at her rounded hips, and her brilliant eyes glowed in the sunlight.

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  • He moved closer to her in case the unseen threat attacked, hands on the hilts of his daggers.

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  • To this wave were owed in all probability the Nilotic scenes depicted on the Mycenae daggers, on frescoes of Hagia Triada and Cnossus, on pottery of Zakro, on the shell-relief of Phaestus, &c.; and also many forms and fabrics, e.g.

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  • Besides the short kris, the Malays use long straight kris with very narrow blades, shorter straight kris of the same form, short broad swords called sundang, long swords of ordinary pattern called pedang, somewhat shorter swords curved like scimitars with curiously carved handles called chenangkas, and short stabbing daggers called tumbok lada.

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  • Similar movements from the same regions appear also to have penetrated Iran itself; hence the resemblance between the dress and daggers of certain classes of warriors on the sculptures of Persepolis and those shown on the Kul Oba vase.

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  • In the Archipelago Hydriotes and Spetsiotes were at daggers drawn; the men of Psara were at open war with those of Samos; all semblance of discipline and cohesion had vanished from the Greek fleet.

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  • Copper daggers with parallel ribbing (61) down the middle are common in the XIth-XIVth Dynasties; and in the XVIIIth-XXth Dynasties they are often shown in scenes and on figures.

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  • His wealth, astuteness, experience and tenacity of purpose, were to baffle Henry's attacks on Scottish independence, till the daggers of pietistic cut-throats closed the long debate.

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  • These men had been alternately bitter enemies and allies of Beaton; in 1543 Kirkcaldy of Grange and the master of Rothes were offering their venal daggers to England, through a Scot named Wishart.

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  • The graves at Hallstatt were partly inhumation partly cremation; they contained swords, daggers, spears, javelins, axes, helmets, bosses and plates of shields and hauberks, brooches, various forms of jewelry, amber and glass beads, many of the objects being decorated with animals and geometrical designs.

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  • Despite the importation of cutlery from England and Germany, Albacete is still famous for its daggers, which are held in high repute by Spaniards.

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  • The knives, daggers and arrowpoints are of slate, bronze and iron, the last two being very rough imitations of stone implements.

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  • The implements of the Bronze Age include swords, awls, knives, gouges, hammers, daggers and arrow-heads.

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  • Owing to its position on two important railways, Alcazar has a flourishing transit-trade in the wines of Estremadura and Andalusia; the soda and alkali of La Mancha are used in the manufacture of soap; and gunpowder, chocolate and inlaid daggers are also made here.

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  • But the parlement soon became disgusted with its alliesthe princes and nobles, who bad only drawn their swords in order to beg more effectively with arms in their hands; and the Parisian mob, whose fanaticism had been aroused by Paul de Gondi, a warlike ecclesiastic, a Catiline in a cassock, who preached the gospel at the daggers point.

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  • In the second act there was scenery representing tombstones, there was a round hole in the canvas to represent the moon, shades were raised over the footlights, and from horns and contrabass came deep notes while many people appeared from right and left wearing black cloaks and holding things like daggers in their hands.

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  • In the porch and in the yard the men whom Petya had armed with swords and daggers, with trousers tucked inside their high boots and with belts and girdles tightened, were taking leave of those remaining behind.

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  • The high priest was murdered in the Temple by pilgrims who carried daggers under their cloaks.

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  • Festus found Judaea infested with robbers and the sicarii, who mingled with the crowds at the feasts and stabbed their enemies with the daggers (sicae) from which their name was derived.

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