Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
"With nothing but that little pigsticker between the three of us!"
"Christ, I thought he'd put that pigsticker right through me.
Ann kept by my side, holding her pigsticker with tight knuckles.
She drew her pigsticker from its sheath and advanced on the man in red.
How can you fight me with that old pigsticker?"
Henry had a knife, all right, a regular pigsticker.
I have money, and a skill with this little pigsticker that makes up for my lack of brawn.
You're passing fair with a pigsticker; I want you to be familiar with it at need.
"Sonny, unless you're a barber, I think you'd better put that pigsticker down.
"Most of us aren't big enough to handle the kind of pigsticker you swing.
I was about to thank her, until she started trying to pry my jewels loose with that pigsticker."
You'll probably get scalped before it's all over, or hung, or a Mexican will get you with a pigsticker.
Watch that pigsticker, will you!
Throw me over that pigsticker ye be wavin', and then swim over to us bare as a babe.
The pigsticker did his best.'
'Its name is Pigsticker.
The mortise chisel, even in its heavyweight "pigsticker" form, is used differently to a twybill, although the two may be used together.
She looked him up and down, evidently gauging his ability to defend himself against an incompetent pigsticker, and reluctantly concluding that he might manage, even one-handed.
Just Ol' Pigsticker.'
A spike bayonet, also known as a pigsticker in informal contexts, is a blade attachment for a firearm taking the form of a pointed spike rather than a knife.
This pallid entity"--he pressed the tip of his prehistoric pigsticker hard enough to spill a drop of luminous silver ichor--"will never dampen our fire again.
Amram kept running toward the bushes, heard thumping behind him and a moment later was overtaken by Hillel, with Filaq mounted bareback and holding Lancet like a pigsticker, charging hard into the shadows on the grass.
III, largely due to its heavier barrel, and a new bayonet was designed to go with the rifle: a spike bayonet, which was essentially a steel rod with a sharp point, and was nicknamed "pigsticker" by soldiers.