[
UK
/ˈæɹəʊ/
]
[ US /ˈæɹoʊ, ˈɛɹoʊ/ ]
[ US /ˈæɹoʊ, ˈɛɹoʊ/ ]
NOUN
- a mark to indicate a direction or relation
- a projectile with a straight thin shaft and an arrowhead on one end and stabilizing vanes on the other; intended to be shot from a bow
How To Use arrow In A Sentence
- The soldier fired the rifle through a narrow aperture in a pile of sandbags.
- Richard and his friends, he reminds us constantly, are wealthy, beautiful, aloof from the slings and arrows of dowdiness and paying bills and slogging it out in monotonous jobs.
- My favorite load for turkeys is Beman ICS Hunter arrows fletched with Bonning Blazer vanes and tipped with Vortex Pro-Series 100 grain 2.25 broadheads. Which load do you use for turkey
- And its world was a narrow swamp, a grey, nubiferous environment, where it lived its contented, active, idyllic, almost mindless existence. The Voyage of the Space Beagle
- Having had some narrow escapes the priest was eventually arrested as a recusant priest and was tried by revolutionary Court.
- Its independence may encourage it to pursue a course of narrow self-interest rather than the public interest. Financial Markets, Institutions and Money
- Before reaching the main square, the vehicle swerved left and entered a narrow side street filled with people, most of them in uniform. Somewhere East of Life
- Thousands of householders are being urged to redesign their gardens to halt the rapid decline of sparrows and starlings. Times, Sunday Times
- It was not just established states that were eager narrowly to define the right of self-determination as a right end colonial status.
- The arrows indicate the beginning of the grace note figure and the placement of each note in the triplet figure for the left hand.