The cast of Hoist on His Own Petard - 1912 includes: Kathleen Butler as At Dancing Academy Edward Dillon as At Dancing Academy Charles Murray as Henrico Gus Pixley as At Dancing Academy
Transformers - 1984 Hoist Goes Hollywood 2-38 was released on: USA: 21 November 1985
Jib Crane is usually a crane used to lift midium weight materials with a hoist & its called Jib Crane because in Jib Cranes the structure on which the hoist is mounted is right angular shaped thing.
He was singing "Hoist the colors" -- Also listed as "Hoist the colors high". This was a piece written especially for the movies.
Brendyn Bell
she was a freedomfighter from sonitpur,baranari ,assam disrict.she was shot in the chest.she was about to hoist the indian flag.we the assamese,are proud and will never forget her sacrifice.
Hoist with your own petard - means injured by the device you intended to use injure others
The cast of Hoist Away - 1996 includes: Gerard McSorley as The Captain
A petard is a small bomb used to breach gates and walls in early modern warfare. It is typically attached to the target and then detonated to create an opening for an attack. The phrase "hoist with his own petard" refers to being harmed by one's own actions or devices.
The George Carlin Show - 1994 George Gets Hoist by His Own Petard 2-4 was released on: USA: 6 November 1994
The cast of Extinct - 2010 includes: John Tillapaugh as Alan Hoist
"hoist with one's own petard"
The phrase "hoist by one's own petard" means to be harmed or caught in one's own trap or scheme. The term "petard" refers to a small bomb used to breach walls in warfare, so being "hoist by one's own petard" signifies that someone's own actions or plans have backfired on them.
The petard was the first 'shaped' explosive charge, used by a Mining Engineer (colloquially 'sapper') to precisely direct a blast onto a single point, like a lock or door hinge, when mining toward a defended structure during a siege. It was shaped like a squat cone and because of this shape, concentrated a small charge so well that the sound of the blast rarely carried through the door to the defender. This enabled the sapper to use such a small charge that he could remain quite close to the spot. So close, in fact, that it was conceivable that a sapper might be 'hoist by his own petard' if he was a bit of a show-off. First printed reference was in Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' III.iv.207 "For tis the sport to haue the enginer Hoist with his owne petar"
There is an irony that he is killed with his own poison (hoist with his own petard, one might say). Also, since Laertes knows he's going to die, he has an incentive to spill the beans on Claudius: "The king's to blame!"
The reference can be found in Hamlet (Act 3, scene 4)There's letters seal'd, and my two schoolfellows,Whom I will trust as I will adders fang'd-They bear the mandate, they must sweep my wayAnd marshal me to knavery. Let it work;For 'tis the sport to have the enginerHoist with his own petard, an't shall go hardBut I will delve one yard below their minesAnd blow them at the moon.Shakespeare didn't invent the term though.
Hoist is a noun (a hoist) and a verb (to hoist).
whate'er and sayeth.. End some words in -eth. Learn and use the nearly defunct subjunctive; use words like bodkin, petard, hoist, arrass, wherefore (meaning WHY, not WHERE); alas. That should do it; no one will be able to tell you apart.