- A
poniard /ˈpɒnjərd/ or
poignard (Fr.) is a long,
lightweight thrusting knife with a
continuously tapering,
acutely pointed blade, and a cross-guard,...
- The Low-Cost
Guided Imaging Rocket (LOGIR; Korean: 저비용 유도 이미징 로켓) or
Poniard (Korean: 비궁; Hanja: 匕弓; RR: Bi-gung) is a surface-to-ship
guided rocket developed...
-
Peter Baxter, the firm's accountant, is
found dead,
stabbed with a
Masonic poniard, and Ian is
fatally poisoned.
Barnaby and
Jones suspect a
disgruntled employee...
- Demmin, Auguste, An
Illustrated History of Arms and Armour: The Dagger,
Poniard, Stiletto, Kouttar, Crease, Etc., London:
George Bell & Sons (1877), pp...
- many
pilgrims returning homeward from Beverley… [Æthelstan]
offered his
poniard upon the holy
altar [at Beverley], and made a
promise that, if the lord...
- much like that of a pike; but it is
armed with
scales so
strong and a
poniard could not
pierce them. Its
color is silver-gray. The 1878
translation of...
- we
should recount/Our
baleful news, and at each word's deliverance/Stab
poniards in our
flesh till all were told,/The
words would add more
anguish than...
- Thornycroft);
Poniard (from Scotts); and
Rifle and
Spear (from Denny).
Three ships were
cancelled on 22
November 1944 - Grenade,
Halberd and
Poniard.
Eight more...
-
commoners were
allowed to
carry on
their person. In English, the
terms poniard and dirk are
loaned during the late 16th to
early 17th century, the latter...
- the lancet, the
arctrave or hook, the
bolline or sickle, the needle, the
poniard, a white-handled
knife and
another knife, with a
black handle, used to...