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Clawish hands, on the ends of arms that seemed as thin as polo sticks, lunged into the light.
I have seen many a good man with a bat or a polo stick ruined by Mrs Palm and her five daughters.
A stirring moment comes when the first soloist, Michael Moses, merely places the stylized head of his polo stick against a real red ball.
The Ball and Polo Stick.
Ricky put a hand over Daisy's, a large rough hand with callouses beneath the base of each long finger from endlessly holding a polo stick.
Ricky got very uptight at Miami Airport when his polo sticks were nearly put on a plane to Hawaii by mistake.
At 5'1 she wasn't sure how she would be able to swing the eight-foot polo stick while seated on an elephant more than twice her height.
The Mameluke deck contained 52 cards comprising four "suits:" polo sticks, coins, swords, and cups.
After a lightning whip through immigration, an official located all their luggage and polo sticks and whizzed them through customs.
'I want to ask two f-f-favours,' said Ricky as he put Perdita's suitcases in a boot crammed with polo sticks.
The door was covered with a machine-made Persian rug, the walls arranged with large prints of alpine skiers and men on thundering horses swinging polo sticks and sailors racing through snarling seas.
The term mallet is used exclusively in US English; British English prefers the term polo stick as the stick technically differs from a mallet in shape and usage.
At the time, polo sticks made in Argentina were very popular but following the Falklands War, imports of Argentinian products into Britain had been banned and there was little competition to British manufacturers.
The important items being produced are tennis rackets, hockey sticks, hokey balls, polo sticks, cricket bats and balls, footballs, (complete) and numerous goods used in both in-door as well out-door games.
Then, immediately pulling herself together, she strolled up and thanked Kevin and Brigadier Canford very sweetly for her polo stick, before flicking a very obvious V-sign at Trace on the way back.
In the center was a mahogany table, covered with books, and smokers' implements; the walls were decorated with college trophies and colors--flags, posters, photographs and knickknacks--tennis rackets, canoe paddles, golf clubs, and polo sticks.
He had specially designed a lovely brooch incorporating the Prince of Wales feathers, two polo sticks and a crown; it was made in Welsh gold from the Gwynfynydd mine, with diamonds, emeralds, and rubies, and was to be auctioned after luncheon.