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cutlass and is
In the English-speaking Caribbean such as Jamaica, Guyana, Grenada and in Trinidad and Tobago, the term " cutlass " is used for these agricultural tools.
Unlike other Commonwealth countries, the sword is a traditional naval cutlass.
The word cutlass developed from a 17th-century English variation of coutelas, a 16th-century French word for a machete-like blade ( modern French for " knife ", in general, is " couteau " The word is often spelt " cuttoe " in 17th and 18th century English ).
Although also used on land, the cutlass is best known as the sailor's weapon of choice.
A United States Marine Corps engineer NCO is reported to have killed an enemy with a Model 1941 cutlass at Incheon during the Korean War.
A cutlass is still carried by the recruit designated as the Recruit Chief Petty Officer for each division at US Navy Recruit Training Command.
While LeChuck is casting a spell on the monkeys, Guybrush attempts to kill LeChuck with a voodoo cutlass he assembled, but corrupts the voodoo spell needed to perfect the sword by using grog instead of voodoo root beer.
It is distinct from the type of blade ( e. g., clip point or drop point knife, sabre or cutlass, axe or chisel, etc.
* a cutless ( not cutlass ) bearing is a form of stave bearing made from rubber.
The cutlass or curtal-axe also known as a falchion ( French badelaire, braquemart, coutelas, malchus Italian coltellaccio, storta, German messer, dussack, malchus ) is a broad-bladed curved hanger or long knife.
In some early statues, Calungsod is sometimes shown with a spear and catana ( cutlass ), the instruments of his death.

cutlass and short
Their effective range was short, and they were frequently used as an adjunct to a sword or cutlass.
In later usage, the cutlass referred to the short naval boarding sabre.

cutlass and sabre
Singlestick was developed as a method of training in the use of backswords such as the cavalry sabre or cutlass.

cutlass and sword
a carriage raising up the choking June dust, and beyond, in a meadow, a local militia company drilling with muskets, Kentuck' rifles, every kind of horse pistol, old sword, or cutlass.
For example, during the Aceh War the Acehnese Klewangs, a sword similar to the machete, proved very effective in close quarters combat with Dutch troops, leading the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army to adopt a heavy cutlass, also called klewang ( very similar in appearance to the US Navy Model 1917 Cutlass ) to counter it.
* Hanger, a sword similar to a cutlass, used by woodsmen and soldiers in 17th to 18th centuries

cutlass and with
Acts of savagery on Kidd's part were reported by escaped prisoners, who told stories of being hoisted up by the arms and drubbed with a drawn cutlass.
In the British Virgin Islands, Grenada, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Barbados, Saint Lucia, and Trinidad and Tobago, the word planass means to hit someone with the flat of the blade of a machete or cutlass.
Tom Strong # 31 and # 32, " The Black Blade of the Barbary Coast " parts 1 & 2, feature albino pirate Captain Zodiac seeking the " Black Blade ", a black cutlass marked with red runes.
One of them wounded him on the left leg with a large cutlass, which resembles a scimitar, only being larger.
In times of peace the Ottoman Empire supplied no arms, and the Janissaries on service in the capital of Constantinople were armed only with clubs ; they were forbidden to carry any arms save a cutlass, known as yatagan, the only exception being at the frontier posts.
Legend has previously reported that out of the 30, 000, there were only two survivors: Louis-Auguste Cyparis, a felon held in an underground cell in the town's jail for wounding a friend with a cutlass, and Léon Compère-Léandre, a man who lived at the edge of the city.
The Act allowed the police to arrest " any person with any gun, pistol, hanger, cutlass, bludgeon or other offensive weapon ... with intent to commit a felonious act ".
Guybrush returns as a ghost and maneuvers LeChuck into a position where Elaine can attack him with the cutlass.
Stickplay with wooden swords as a school for the cutlass remained common in some navies.
The British then boarded her at 22: 20 on 16 February, and — after some hand-to-hand fighting with bayonets and the last recorded Royal Naval action with cutlass — overwhelmed the ship's crew and then went down to the hold.
* 2004-Several one-off prizes were created for the Pirates Gold auction event at GenCon 2004, including a wooden replica period ship with a Pirates of the Spanish Main plaque, several constructed game pieces signed by Jordan Weisman and Mike Mulvilhill and mounted in shadowboxes, pirate items such as a replica cutlass, and more.
Originally, the TV-rating was supposed to stab Mr. Censor with a dagger, but FOX Network objected because it was too gruesome and was changed to a cutlass.
:" He drew his cutlass, and with it cut open the breast of one of those poor Spanish, and pulling out his heart with his sacrilegious hands, began to bite and gnaw it with his teeth, like a ravenous wolf, saying to the rest: I will serve you all alike, if you show me not another way.
" MCMAP comes from an evolution dating back to the creation of the Marine Corps, beginning with the martial abilities of Marine boarding parties, who often had to rely on bayonet and cutlass techniques.
On September 5, 1776, the Naval Committee published the Continental Marines uniform regulations specifying green coats with white facings ( lapels, cuffs, and coat lining ), with a leather high collar to protect against cutlass slashes and to keep a man's head erect.

cutlass and slightly
The last new model of cutlass adopted by the U. S. Navy was the Model 1917 ; although cutlasses made during World War II were called the Model 1941, they were only a slightly modified variant of the Model 1917.

cutlass and on
According to an story, the pirate Blackbeard marooned a number of his crew on Dead Chest Island for a number of days as punishment, leaving them with nothing but a cutlass and a bottle of rum each.

cutlass and cutting
Throughout the Caribbean, the term ' cutlass ' refers to a laborers ' cutting tool.

cutlass and often
Owing to its versatility, the cutlass was as often an agricultural implement and tool as it was as a weapon ( cf.

cutlass and .
Cutlasses remained the favoured weapon for the navies of the time, though Queen Victoria's Royal Navy gave up the pikes once used to repel attacks by boarders in favor of the cutlass bayonet.
Another advantage to the cutlass was its simplicity of use.
French historian Alexandre Exquemelin reports the buccaneer Francois l ' Ollonais using a cutlass as early as 1667.
The cutlass remained an official weapon in United States Navy stores until 1949, though seldom used in training after the early 1930s.
In a message released March 31, 2010, the US Navy approved optional wear of a ceremonial cutlass as part of the Chief Petty Officer dress uniform, pending final design approval.
That approval came in January 2011, and the cutlass was made available for ceremonial wear by Chief Petty Officers in August of that year.

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