DAGGER - meaning and definition. What is DAGGER
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What (who) is DAGGER - definition

SHORT, POINTED HAND-TO-HAND WEAPON
Daggers; Bronze Age dagger; Knightly dagger; Medieval dagger; Prehistoric daggers; 🗡
  • [[Buster Warenski]] dagger
  • Bronze Age swords, [[Kurdistan]], museum of Sanandaj
  • Mughal]] dagger, [[Louvre]]
  • ''Dagger with Zoomorphic Hilt'', ca. 16th century, [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dagger_with_Zoomorphic_Hilt_MET_DP253146.jpg Metropolitan Museum of Art]
  • Depiction of combat with the dagger (''degen'') in [[Hans Talhoffer]] (1467)
  • 20th-century daggers
  • The [[Fairbairn–Sykes fighting knife]], a modern-day dagger
  • Achaemenid]] guard in [[Persepolis]]
  • A [[Neolithic]] dagger from the [[Muséum de Toulouse]]
  • Iberian triangular iron dagger
  • Pre-Roman Iberian iron dagger forged between the middle of the 5th century BC and the 3rd century BC
  • Modern reproductions of medieval daggers. From left to right: [[Ballock dagger]], [[Rondel dagger]], and a [[Quillon]] dagger
  • U.S. Army emblem with dagger

dagger         
n.
1) to draw a dagger
2) to plunge a dagger into (smb.)
3) (misc.) to look daggers at ('to look angrily at')
Dagger         
·noun A timber placed diagonally in a ship's frame.
II. Dagger ·vt To pierce with a dagger; to Stab.
III. Dagger ·noun A short weapon used for stabbing. This is the general term: ·cf. Poniard, Stiletto, Bowie knife, Dirk, Misericorde, Anlace.
IV. Dagger ·noun A mark of reference in the form of a dagger [/]. It is the second in order when more than one reference occurs on a page;
- called also obelisk.
dagger         
n.
Poniard, dirk, stiletto.

Wikipedia

Dagger

A dagger is a fighting knife with a very sharp point and usually two sharp edges, typically designed or capable of being used as a thrusting or stabbing weapon. Daggers have been used throughout human history for close combat confrontations, and many cultures have used adorned daggers in ritual and ceremonial contexts. The distinctive shape and historic usage of the dagger have made it iconic and symbolic. A dagger in the modern sense is a weapon designed for close-proximity combat or self-defense; due to its use in historic weapon assemblages, it has associations with assassination and murders. Double-edged knives, however, play different sorts of roles in different social contexts.

A wide variety of thrusting knives have been described as daggers, including knives that feature only a single cutting edge, such as the European rondel dagger or the Afghan pesh-kabz, or, in some instances, no cutting edge at all, such as the stiletto of the Renaissance. However, in the last hundred years or so, in most contexts, a dagger has certain definable characteristics, including a short blade with a sharply tapered point, a central spine or fuller, and usually two cutting edges sharpened the full length of the blade, or nearly so. Most daggers also feature a full crossguard to keep the hand from riding forwards onto the sharpened blade edges.

Daggers are primarily weapons, so knife legislation in many places restricts their manufacture, sale, possession, transport, or use.

Examples of use of DAGGER
1. When the dance was over, the same Bedouin presented Putin with a traditional Arabian dagger, prompting the president to promise that a Russian dagger would arrive in return.
2. Brown will not, for understandable reasons, wield the dagger.
3. The establishment‘s explanations sound like schoolboy cloak–and–dagger excuses.
4. The Obsidian Dagger (Horatio Lyle) by Catherine Webb, Atom '2.
5. Why bother with such elaborate cloak–and–dagger tactics?