Examples of using Prow in English and their translations into Serbian
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Latin
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Cyrillic
The prow towards me.
No. That's the prow.
It's the prow of a ship.
Musketeers to the prow!
The prow facing the boats.
Let's line up by the prow.
That's the prow, and that's the stern.
I will keep it on the prow.
Let us be on the prow of the Titanic.
The prow can still be seen today.[3].
Anyway, that's not the prow. That's the stern.
Yes, the world's a ship on its passage out, and not a voyage complete; andthe pulpit is its prow.
And you know the prow is much heavier than the stern.
So you simultaneously headbutted me in the gentleman's region and snapped the prow off the galleon.
You see her carved on the prow of an ancient ship… in the dying embers of the camp fire.
I was thinking… what wouldthis gate look like, with a bust of me on the side of it, like the prow of a ship?
A corpse stood at the prow of a ship, eyes bright in his dead face, grey lips smiling sadly.
After the campaign,the king ordered the bodies of the seven princes to be hung upside down on the prow of his ship.
The figures are seated in the prow of a ship, the symbol of the City of Paris, and they are surrounded by dolphins spraying water through their nostrils.
At some time in the 9th century, monks would have looked down into the River Seine and seen the prow of a Viking ship coming up the river.
On coins, she frequently stands between a modius(grain-measure) and the prow of a galley, with ears of grain in one hand and a cornucopia in the other; sometimes she holds a rudder or an anchor.[9].
I've spent many years battling demons in my head, andI was able to purge them on the prow of the Jolly Roger, riding the ocean's waves.
Annona is typically depicted with a cornucopia(horn of plenty) in her arm, and a ship's prow in the background, alluding to the transport of grain into the harbor of Rome.
But it also refers to a more recent romanesque winged dragon, that often breathes fire and has four legs.[1][3][4] The term dreki was also applied to the great Viking longships,where the prow, when carved in the likeness of a dragon, was meant to protect and impart ferocity upon the sailors.[4].