A clapper bridge is an ancient form of bridge, and is built using stone uprights spaced across the stream or river, with stone slabs laid on top to form the walkway.
A clapper bridge is an ancient form of bridge found on the moors of Devon (Dartmoor and ... They are often situated close to a ford where carts could cross. ... Some larger clapper bridges, such as at Dartmeet and Bellever, have collapsed – their slabs swept away by floods, or raided for building or wall construction. However ...
Although often believed to be of prehistoric origin, most were erected in medieval times, and some in later centuries. They are often situated close to a ford where carts could cross. The largest clapper bridge, Anping bridge, was built at around 1000 AD in Fujian Province, China.
It appears that "Clapper dudgeon beggar" is not a recognized term or phrase. It could be a combination of unrelated words or a typographical error.
dignify
The idiomatic phrase is "if these stones could talk" (or if these stones could speak), meaning that the location was likely the scene of historic occurrences, where most likely the stones have been in place for a very long time.
No, but you could construct one from the data provided on the related questions section.
They could help construct buildings is the only one i could think of
Could be a large array of stones. But It could also be Feldspar.
There could be stones. They are not supposed to be in there. And they do not naturally occur in beans, so it would be a problem.
she builds the bridge so that they could get across the creek.
You could pick the stones out of the mixture. You could you use water to rinse ash off individual stones and then let the rinsed ashes dry.
they used sharp stones. Humans were in the Stone Age at the time. Because of that, they used stones. They sharpened the stones with other stones. These prehistoric people were very reliant on their stones. using thier stones they could kill the tiger and use the fur and meat.