খড়ম, কাষ্ঠের জুতা
(1) A shoe carved from a single block of wood
(2) Footwear usually with wooden soles
(1) The sabot allows a lighter flight projectile which can be flown to greater ranges than could the M830.
(2) In subsonic slug loads, Metro Gun Systems offers a special Hastings 1 1/4-ounce sabot slug that has performed admirably on deer.
(3) The 12-gauge .50-caliber slug weighs in at 385 grains and is nestled in a sabot .
(4) The Platinum Tip bullet also will be offered in a muzzleloading component, as a 260-grain bullet packaged with a sabot .
(5) The croupier took two cards from the sabot .
(6) After the players have placed their bets, the dealer picks out three cards from the sabot putting them before him.
(7) The gun fires separate loading projectiles which have semi-combustible cartridge case and sabot .
(8) Modern guns will use a sabot or a pistol bullet, which come pre-packaged.
(9) The sabot 's guiding shards could be seen flying off to either side as the dense, narrow core went on to find its mark.
(10) In order to transmit the energy from the charge to the sub-calibre projectile a sabot is needed, which acts as a u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510slingu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb either to drive an armour-piercing core harder, or to throw a sub-calibre projectile further.
(11) During the First World War it housed Belgian refugees, who made sabot clogs in the workshop of Arthur Simpson, renowned furniture designer and wood-carver.
(12) The slug weighs 1 1/4 ounces, and fits into a very clever one-piece combination wad and sabot that encloses the base of the slug.
(13) For the biggest game, I still tend toward heavy lead missiles; jacketed pistol-type projectiles in sabots have also proved reliable on big game.
(14) Again, the idea is to search downrange, picking up spent sabots .
(15) Women in Brittany, of course, all wear sabots , you understand.
(16) The shells were held in the centre of the barrel by sabots arranged around their circumference, which fell away after the missile left the barrel.
(17) He said they were called sabots , or klompens - and were the root of the word sabotage - when Dutch militant workers had thrown them into the gears to stop factory production as protest over something.
(18) The capped and saboted peasant women who waited on us were not more simple in their ways.
(19) In an old Flemish custom, Christmas gifts were brought in sabots , or wooden shoes.
(20) This pair of wooden sabots featured in the Shoe and Leather Fair, Islington, 1895 and the Bethnal Green Museum Shoe Exhibition, London, England in 1897.
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