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SwordA sword is a a weapon, consisting in its most fundamental design of a blade and a handle. The blade is usually of some metal ground to at least one sharp edge and often has a pointed tip for thrusting. The handle, called the hilt, can be made of many materials, but the material most common is wood covered by leather, fish skin or metal wiring. The parts of a sword are remarkably consistant between cultures. The basic intent and physics of swordsmanship is fairly constant. This kind of weapon has been in use from the Bronze Age when the construction of long metal blades was possible for the first time. Early swords were made of solid bronze or copper; these were hard, but quite brittle. Not until iron could be forged did the sword truly become an important weapon. Soon, smiths learned that with a proper amount of coal (specifically the carbon in coal) in the iron, another metal (alloy really) could be produced: steel. Several different ways of swordmaking existed in ancient times. One of the most reputed is pattern welding. Over time new methods were developed all over the world. In Pre-Columbian South America and Mesoamerica several cultures made use of types of swords without developing metallurgy; for example swords with obsidian blades mounted in wooden handles. Having seen use for about five millennia, swords began to lose their military uses in the late 18th century because of increasing availability and reliability of gunpowder weapons. Swords were still used although increasingly limited to officers and ceremonial uniforms. Cavalry sabre charges still occurred as late as World War II during which Japanese and Pacific Islanders also occasionally used swords. There are several hundred types of swords. Here is a list of but the most famous:
Several modern sports and martial arts have components based upon older principles of swordfighting. Among these are fencing, kendo, kenjutsu, escrima, aikido and some variants of kung fu. Many swords in mythology, literature and history are named by their wielders or by the person who makes them.
A tool exists that resembles the sword and it is called a machete (or, in Southern Africa, a panga) and is used to cut through thick vegetation. Indeed, the difference between a machete and a sword is mainly that of utilization, and several types of swords in history resemble the machete in construction, such as for example the scramasax and the falchion. While a rigid classification isn't feasibile, the latter is usually referred to as a kind of chopping sword. The scramasax, usually lacking a cross-piece or any kind of guard, is more properly considered a war knife.
For a more comprehensive listing of swords types, see list of swords and yet he had a gift for following the sinuosities of the Oriental mind;
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curious way. For years he had done no good for himself, trying his hand
succeed, though he came out of his enterprises owing no one. Yet he had
estates to become still more encumbered, against the advice of his
further declined. The only European in Egypt who shared his own belief
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reasons why sugar.html">sugar, salt, cotton, cattle and other things had not done
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Khedive's domains, he had but one ten pounds to his name.
He went to Dicky Donovan and asked the loan of a thousand.html">thousand.html">thousand pounds. It
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that he would receive five thousand pounds for the thousand within a
he did not fulfil. He gave Kingsley the thousand pounds. He did more.
seldom spoken, and he secured a bond from Ismail, which might not be
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