wood shot
Look at other dictionaries:
wood shot — noun 1. : a golf shot played with a wood 2. : a shot in a racket game in which the ball or shuttlecock is stroked with any of the wooden parts of the racket rather than the strings * * * 1. (in tennis, badminton, and other racket games) a shot… … Useful english dictionary
wood shot — noun Date: 1927 1. a golf shot played with a wood 2. a stroke in a racket game in which the ball or shuttlecock is hit with the frame of the racket rather than the strings … New Collegiate Dictionary
Shot of Love — Álbum de Bob Dylan Publicación 10 de agosto de 1981 Grabación Marzo mayo de 1981 Género(s) Rock Duración 40:15 … Wikipedia Español
Shot of Love — Shot of Love … Википедия
Shot of love — Album par Bob Dylan Sortie 10 août 1981 Enregistrement mars – mai 1981 Durée 40:15 Genre(s) rock chrétien Product … Wikipédia en Français
Wood Green tube station — Wood Green is a London Underground station on the Piccadilly Line. The station is between Turnpike Lane and Bounds Green stations and is in Travelcard Zone 3. It is located at junction of Wood Green High Road and Lordship Lane. It serves Wood… … Wikipedia
Wood (golf) — A modern 460cc driver alongside an early 1980s persimmon driver. A wood (also called a driver) is a type of club used in the sport of golf. Woods are used to hit the ball farther (greater distances) than any other type of golf club. Woods are so… … Wikipedia
Shot of Love — Infobox Album Name = Shot of Love Type = studio Artist = Bob Dylan Released = August 10, 1981 Recorded = March–May 1981 Genre = Gospel rock Length = 40:15 Label = Columbia Producer = Chuck Plotkin, Bob Dylan with Bumps Blackwell on Shot of Love… … Wikipedia
shot hole — noun drill hole for a charge of an explosive • Hypernyms: ↑bore, ↑bore hole, ↑drill hole * * * noun 1. : a drilled hole in which a charge of dynamite is exploded in mining or to produce artificial earth vibrations in seismic prospecting for oil 2 … Useful english dictionary
Shot heard round the world — The Shot heard round the world is a well known phrase that has come to represent several historical incidentals throughout world history. The line is originally from the opening stanza of Ralph Waldo Emerson s Concord Hymn (1837), and referred to … Wikipedia