not without the coups' baby, not without the coups
The Indian touched a living enemy with a coup stick .
The lokota used coup sticks to prove there bravery.
Buckskin - 1958 Coup Stick 1-23 was released on: USA: 2 February 1959
A coup stick
Are you talking about the stick they use to touch enimes before battle? (Counting coup) -- it was a coup stick.
American Indians counted coup in combat. Touching the enemy with your spear or hatchet and that earned you points. Warriors had a coup stick which was decorated with feathers and scalps.
It is a French word word and is pronounced as 'koo' . It means a 'blow' or 'knock'. 'Coup d'etat' is a French language expressionm often shortened to 'coup' meaning a sudden and often violent change of the ruling regime in any given state. .
To destroy the Americans with a heavy blow to the head
To destroy the Americans with a heavy blow to the head
Please see the related links - The first is a video about preparing pesto with a (non stick) blender. The second is the "pesto" topic in Answers.com.
No it is not to hunt bufallo, it is a long slender stick that a warrior would wrap around an enemy and pull the enemy off his horse.
usually it represents the amount of times a warrior "touched" the enemy in battle.....