|
ENSIGNS |
Flags |
|
PENNANTS |
Championships flags |
|
STANDARDS |
Naval flags |
|
BUNTING |
Festive flags |
|
|
PAVED |
Put down flags |
|
OUR |
Film, Flags Of ... Fathers |
|
FLAG |
That which flags or hangs down loosely. |
|
FLAGWORM |
A worm or grub found among flags and sedge. |
|
|
HASK |
A basket made of rushes or flags, as for carrying fish. |
|
BUNTINE |
A thin woolen stuff, used chiefly for flags, colors, and
ships' signals. |
|
HAL'YARD |
A rope or tackle for hoisting or lowering yards,
sails, flags, etc. |
|
TOUCH |
That part of the field which is beyond the line of flags on
either side. |
|
TROPHY |
Anything taken from an enemy and preserved as a memorial of
victory, as arms, flags, standards, etc. |
|
SEMAPHORE |
A signal telegraph; an apparatus for giving signals by
the disposition of lanterns, flags, oscillating arms, etc. |
|
MAT |
A fabric of sedge, rushes, flags, husks, straw, hemp, or
similar material, used for wiping and cleaning shoes at the door, for
covering the floor of a hall or room, and for other purposes. |
|
ENSIGN |
...flag, or a
banner indicating nationality, carried by a ship or a body of soldiers;
-- as distinguished from flags indicating divisions of the ar... |
|
GNEISS |
...t it breaks rather easily into coarse slabs
or flags. Hornblende sometimes takes the place of the mica, and it is
then called hornblendic / syen... |