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  • 00:00

    I'm here with Colonel retired colonel Peter  Kilburn and we're in Seattle Washington and  

  • 00:07

    Colonel Kilburn has decided to let us  auction his collection of bayonets  

  • 00:15

    and associated items and you've got  three major groups to your collection,  

  • 00:21

    why don't you just explain that to us  and then kind of show us the collection,  

  • 00:25

    and if I need to come around and see the other  side the camera is portable, so go ahead. Well,  

  • 00:31

    I've been collecting for over 65 years. I always  like swords, but could never afford them and,  

  • 00:37

    they were too dangerous, but I went to a surplus  store with my dad and they had a barrel bayonets  

  • 00:42

    so I got to pick a bayonet and kind of fell in  love with them after that. I put up on the wall  

  • 00:50

    I didn't play with it I didn't threaten kids  and eventually I sold that one after I started  

  • 00:57

    collecting. It was sort of what are you looking for? Well, it's sort of, what I don't have, and bayonets are still  

  • 01:04

    the cheapest form of weapons collecting, they're  getting more pricey now, with with age.

  • 01:18

    Bayonets are kind of interesting, they're  collectible because they'll be to a certain  

  • 01:25

    country a certain era a certain rifle, and those  change so there are books that have all of this  

  • 01:34

    information, and so if you want to know what you're  looking for my problem I first started out there  

  • 01:42

    was no bayonet books and I go to the gun shows and  I see these tables with a mound of bayonets well  

  • 01:49

    kid what are you looking for well I don't know  it's just what I don't have and then I'll find  

  • 01:54

    little variations then I got a bayonet book small  and I saw what it didn't have and locked in what  

  • 02:03

    I did have and so I had something to seek and of  course any kind of collector the more you get the  

  • 02:08

    more you want I did world bayonets well I ran out  of space and so I pardon the pun cut it down to us  

  • 02:23

    United Kingdom which includes Canada Australia  New Zealand South Africa and Germany and those  

  • 02:36

    are the most collectible so I have a catalogue set  up here this first rack is part one United States

  • 02:49

    and they're in chronological order from  Revolutionary War I'm down to World War  

  • 03:02

    two the early Revolutionary War ones of  course weren't necessarily us made vain  

  • 03:09

    us because they didn't have the methods  yet so a lot of them are imported from  

  • 03:14

    Britain Germany Holland various other places  then they became us bayonets I have Civil  

  • 03:26

    War bayonets in this area Confederate  and US on down this is first section

  • 03:50

    this is us band that's a British band these are  us bayonets letter openers here then we start  

  • 04:08

    with the British from 1616 leonard's on up to  modern us yes 1700s on up to modern and of the  

  • 04:21

    modern I've probably got 35 or 40 different  varieties of the present m9 bayonet that's  

  • 04:29

    on the other side I can't see that okay so let me  unplug here for a minute we'll go around and see  

  • 04:36

    those but these are all different manufacturer  varieties different manufacturers are different  

  • 05:01

    models of the present m9 yeah okay now this one  here we're not gonna sell he's keeping this one  

  • 05:11

    this one's a special Desert Storm bayonet  that has his name on it so that one should  

  • 05:16

    be kept by him these other ones though you  even have a Coast Guard one which was pretty  

  • 05:21

    interesting the orange one I guess these are  for Arctic warfare or something the white ones  

  • 05:28

    yeah like Mountain Division would probably  use those experimental type to a different  

  • 05:34

    manufacturer same type different scabbard  and style mm-hm this is a training bayonet

  • 05:43

    I always wondered how they would do  that so someone didn't get cut when  

  • 05:46

    they were all right you know in the movies  they're always using a real bayonet and I  

  • 05:51

    thought I don't think so they do a  lot with that I'm gonna learn honey

  • 06:07

    mentioned the movies this is a really proper hmm  

  • 06:21

    it's it looks just like the World War  two but it's cast metal and that's a

  • 06:50

    okay this is Great Britain or I came in part  two including 1858 saber bayonets and the  

  • 07:17

    double-barrel Jacobs bayonets the varieties  they're all they look somewhere but they're  

  • 07:27

    all different including the the new present-day  British pea these are Australia and down here I'm  

  • 07:39

    sorry Canadian Australia New Zealand and different  different varieties of these from W rats next

  • 07:58

    Germany part one the colored nuts are each  company each division had their own specific  

  • 08:17

    color pattern and the nuts don't necessarily  go with a bayonet of that but they're same  

  • 08:26

    era World War one thereabouts and the loose  tassels where when you get down to World War  

  • 08:34

    Two in between they're solid like this but  these are again chronologically from the  

  • 08:47

    seventeen hundreds up to the Weimar period  between the wars black hilts also have a  

  • 08:58

    interesting rule paperweight from the museum  in Germany it has a bayonet letter opener

  • 09:09

    that was from that same period wasn't correct yeah  

  • 09:12

    just a cousin come home cross  on it but many of these are

  • 09:18

    engraved doubly engraved

  • 09:32

    so up a lot of the book like  externally they've got engraved blades

  • 09:48

    this what we call our sons bayonets there was  pattern of the blade length and the hilt length  

  • 10:01

    so it would fit the rifle but the muzzle ring  they'll take several different diameter muscles  

  • 10:11

    specifically for captured British belgium or  french rifles so they could use those on their  

  • 10:23

    second line truths these are all different Anthony  Carter wrote a book called air saw bayonets and in  

  • 10:30

    that he's got many different varieties and so I've  got these numbered along with that book so you  

  • 10:37

    can reference it right away this is world war ii  german nazi era the germans always had to be armed  

  • 10:52

    so that's why there's always a lot of dressed  bayonets and dressed daggers but they would  

  • 11:00

    wear we have the stag grips and engraved blades on  some of them and a mock stag which is wood curved  

  • 11:09

    to look like a stag you have the grip emblems  and you have the plain plastic grips this length  

  • 11:16

    is what they call the enlisted man's blanket  this length here which is shorter is NCOs and  

  • 11:22

    officers would be here these are police bandits  and these are fire police bayonets from early ones

  • 11:33

    bottom here we have West German bayonets and East  German these are ak-47 trainers we had one kind  

  • 12:01

    of special bayonet that and then cut down are  made from a claymore sword why don't you show  

  • 12:07

    me that one again that was really neat okay this  one is probably my favorite it's a 1805 bayonet  

  • 12:25

    English bayonet is like this this particular  one is a Scottish version and instead of the  

  • 12:41

    brass hilt like this it's steel and instead  of a typical bayonet blade it's an old broad  

  • 12:49

    serve blade and it's by Runkle and company and  Solingen that company made blades from Scottish  

  • 13:01

    broad swords or claymores from 1710 to 1740 so  the Scots in their wisdom used a British bayonet  

  • 13:14

    the fit of British rifle and put a Scottish blade  on it and this is a real real sword blade not on  

  • 13:22

    iron bayonet blade because all of these are  confiscated or outlawed after the Battle of  

  • 13:29

    Culloden Moor in 1745 but I've guessed by  my favorite one just because it's old and  

  • 13:36

    it's sort of an in-your-face type excellent  have some bayonet sconces or some few other  

  • 13:50

    things around got lots of Prague's and scabbard  parts all right since that much thank you so

All

The example sentences of DAGGERS in videos (15 in total of 20)

so adverb that wh-determiner 's verb, 3rd person singular present why wh-adverb there existential there 's verb, 3rd person singular present always adverb a determiner lot noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction dressed verb, past participle bayonets noun, plural and coordinating conjunction dressed verb, past participle daggers noun, plural but coordinating conjunction they personal pronoun would modal
today proper noun, singular , select verb, base form men noun, plural join verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner procession noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction flagellate verb, base form themselves personal pronoun with preposition or subordinating conjunction daggers noun, plural to to the determiner head noun, singular or mass , among preposition or subordinating conjunction
on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner famous adjective reverse noun, singular or mass , pictured verb, past participle here adverb , we personal pronoun see verb, non-3rd person singular present two cardinal number daggers noun, plural and coordinating conjunction eid proper noun, singular mar proper noun, singular proper noun, singular the determiner ides noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction march proper noun, singular .
who wh-pronoun got verb, past tense hold verb, base form of preposition or subordinating conjunction weapons noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner gods noun, plural including verb, gerund or present participle the determiner daggers noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction vulcan proper noun, singular , which wh-determiner are verb, non-3rd person singular present invulnerable adjective
they personal pronoun carried verb, past tense only adjective lances noun, plural and coordinating conjunction daggers noun, plural , whereas preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner turks proper noun, singular had verb, past tense in preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun midst noun, singular or mass squadrons noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction
40 cardinal number or coordinating conjunction so preposition or subordinating conjunction carvings noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction axes noun, plural spread verb, non-3rd person singular present across preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner stone noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction they personal pronoun represent verb, non-3rd person singular present some determiner axes noun, plural and coordinating conjunction daggers noun, plural
quantity noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction these determiner quivers noun, plural all determiner right adverb well adverb let verb, base form 's possessive ending get verb, base form on preposition or subordinating conjunction to to the determiner uh interjection the determiner daggers noun, plural and coordinating conjunction the determiner sword noun, singular or mass
and coordinating conjunction all determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction hollywood proper noun, singular thinks verb, 3rd person singular present feasting verb, gerund or present participle daggers noun, plural existed verb, past tense , so adverb , at preposition or subordinating conjunction christmas proper noun, singular , for preposition or subordinating conjunction your possessive pronoun turkey noun, singular or mass , for preposition or subordinating conjunction
they personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner ones noun, plural which wh-determiner are verb, non-3rd person singular present offset verb, past participle deliberately adverb so adverb in preposition or subordinating conjunction fact noun, singular or mass there existential there are verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner lot noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction left verb, past participle - hand noun, singular or mass daggers noun, plural
through preposition or subordinating conjunction maille proper noun, singular for preposition or subordinating conjunction example noun, singular or mass or coordinating conjunction indeed adverb daggers noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction your possessive pronoun rondel noun, singular or mass daggers noun, plural , they personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present to to be verb, base form very adverb very adverb
what wh-pronoun it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present all determiner about preposition or subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction the determiner daggers noun, plural that preposition or subordinating conjunction i personal pronoun 'm verb, non-3rd person singular present going verb, gerund or present participle to to be verb, base form demonstrating verb, gerund or present participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction today noun, singular or mass
kind noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction takes verb, 3rd person singular present away adverb any determiner other adjective disadvantage noun, singular or mass so preposition or subordinating conjunction these determiner are verb, non-3rd person singular present good adjective daggers noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present good adjective karambit proper noun, singular
of preposition or subordinating conjunction kind noun, singular or mass replicas noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner thrones proper noun, singular universe noun, singular or mass like preposition or subordinating conjunction swords noun, plural , daggers noun, plural and coordinating conjunction even adverb the determiner baratheon proper noun, singular crown noun, singular or mass
daggers noun, plural to to make verb, base form nestor proper noun, singular regret verb, base form what wh-pronoun he personal pronoun said verb, past tense , and coordinating conjunction when wh-adverb instructing verb, gerund or present participle class noun, singular or mass , working verb, gerund or present participle the determiner students noun, plural to to
these determiner beautiful adjective daggers noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun ballgowns proper noun, singular also adverb tiktok proper noun, singular seems verb, 3rd person singular present have verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner real adjective thing noun, singular or mass about preposition or subordinating conjunction two cardinal number people noun, plural

Use "daggers" in a sentence | "daggers" example sentences

How to use "daggers" in a sentence?

  • Before Simon could answer, he heard the sound of the front door opening. He looked daggers at Jace. "That's my roommate. Kyle. Be nice." Jace smiled charmingly. "I'm always nice.
    -Cassandra Clare-
  • They whispered to Caesar that he was mortal, then sold daggers at half-price in the grand March sale.
    -Ray Bradbury-
  • I like poems that are daggers that sing.
    -Frederick Seidel-
  • O,speak to me no more;these words like daggers enter my ears.(a fancy way of saying SHUT UP!)" — William Shakespeare "hamlet
    -William Shakespeare-
  • Courage is to feel the daily daggers of relentless steel and keep on living.
    -Douglas Malloch-
  • Then, driven by the same impulse, they kissed him--Aylss on the let cheek, Evanlyn on the right. And then they glared daggers at each other. -pg 372
    -John Flanagan-
  • On the heights, all paths are paved with daggers. -Old Seanchan saying
    -Robert Jordan-
  • I want to keep sleeping, but the sun outside my window has other ideas: First blind her. Then jab her eyeballs with scorching-hot daggers.
    -Natasha Friend-

Definition and meaning of DAGGERS

What does "daggers mean?"

/ˈdaɡər/

noun
short knife used as weapon.
other
Small knife, e.g. that can be concealed.