Well a mortar is an artillery shell used during the WWII times so.... It matters how its used in a sentence
"Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used."Pila" in Latin can be a ball, a pillar, or mortar. It all depends on how the word is used.
A homophone for "mortar" is "MORDER", though it is not a standard English word.
The word pestle is generally used in connection with the word mortar. It is from Latin pistillum, an instrument used for crushing; the mortar is a kind of bowl, and the pestle is used to crush a substance to powder in the mortar.
Here are some sentences.The mortar exploded and destroyed the enemy building.The brick mason smoothed the mortar between the bricks.
I built a brick and mortar business from the ground-up. I used a pestle and mortar to crush herbs and make a special elixir. I used my mortar to blow up my enemies.
i am monter
Heavy artillery. Howitzer, mortar
· missile · mortar
Hod
I don't suppose armrot is a compound word... :)Oh, it's mortar.
A shell, fired from a field-gun or a mortar.
Kind or Kleine