Having prongs or tines; usually used in combination.
Sinônimos
Examples for "pronged"
Examples for "pronged"
1Of course there would be more patrols, given that night's two-pronged attack.
2In fact, All Day would make a great twin-pronged Christmas party soundtrack.
3The three-pronged sceptre or trident of Poseidon reappears constantly in ancient history.
4The two-pronged message of economic rebalancing and nationalism is a potent one.
5Then he made a three-pronged fork and gave it to the prince.
1The broad trail divided, like a three-tined candlestick, into narrow trails.
2One afternoon Billy Buck leaned the many-tined manure fork against the barn wall.
3In 1956, the five-tined Swiss Army pie fork with fish fork attatchment is designed.
4He was also brandishing a wicked-looking three-tined wooden fork.
5Will you hand me that three-tined pitchfork over there?
6Cainy and I haven't tined our eyes to-night.
7Two-tined forks and a battered old hoe.
8This hollowed-out foot served to hold several pokers and other useful fireplace implements, including a six-tined toasting fork.
9Sparky brandishes a three-tined yellow pitchfork.
10Besides, the ground would be deeply worked with the two or four tined hoe, at the time of thinning.
11Each held a three-tined pitchfork.
12And there she sat, at a table made of pine boards, eating boiled potatoes with a two-tined steel fork!
13Tin cups and platters made humble substitution for china, and were appropriately accompanied by cast-iron knives and two tined forks.
14The moment they were in place, the glistening pods flattened themselves a bit and then punctured the tubes with their eight-tined data-forks.
15When the three-tined fork was the only one in common use, the blade of the knife was much more in requisition than now.
16It looked, thought Shandy dazedly, as if God had leaned down from heaven and swiped a sharp-tined rake across the boat a few times.