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sabot
[ sab-oh; French sa-boh ]
noun
- a shoe made of a single block of wood hollowed out, worn especially by farmers and workers in the Netherlands, France, Belgium, etc.
- a shoe with a thick wooden sole and sides and a top of coarse leather.
- Military.
- a wooden or metal disk formerly attached to a projectile in a muzzleloading cannon.
- a soft metal ring at the base of a projectile that makes the projectile conform to the rifling grooves of a gun.
sabot
/ ˈsæbəʊ; sabo /
noun
- a shoe made from a single block of wood
- a shoe with a wooden sole and a leather or cloth upper
- a lightweight sleeve in which a subcalibre round is enclosed in order to make it fit the rifling of a firearm. After firing the sabot drops away
- a small sailing boat with a shortened bow
Other Words From
- sa·boted [sa-, bohd, sab, -ohd], adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of sabot1
Example Sentences
Their feet are shod in clogs, sabots, backless loafers, espadrilles with crushable heels and various other iterations of shoes with a covered toe and open back.
He was photographed in 1862 wearing sabots, the wooden clogs that were traditional peasant footwear.
Marine: A sabot is a short tank round.
Sabo, who uses a pseudonym derived from a tank munition called sabot, is selling prints of the poster for $25 on his website.
Sabo – a pseudonym derived from a tank munition called sabot – made his breakthrough in the GOP primaries with a poster of Ted Cruz as a tattooed, muscled convict.
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