Rather than encountering an opposing battle line, or a single large city that is resisting, resistance is found prodcued by relatively small groups, dispersed in different locales.
The collective noun for a pocket is "a pocket of." While not commonly used, this phrase can refer to a group of pockets, such as in clothing or bags. In a broader sense, "pocket" can also be used metaphorically in phrases like "a pocket of resistance" or "a pocket of people." However, there isn't a widely recognized specific collective noun for pockets like there is for animals or other objects.
No, leave your tailgate up. Myth-busters once tested it and the segment can be seen at the related link below. When leaving a tailgate up, a pocket of air is actually created in the back of your pick-up. When new air rushes over this pocket, the new air skims right over the top, lowering air resistance. If you leave the tail-gate down, the new air will get stuck in the pocket, creating MORE wind resistance.
There is no best steel but for a stainless grade for a high end knife..I would recommend 440c for its corrision resistance and mirror finish properties.
An adjective. It describes the pocket, implying that it is the pocket of a pair of trousers.
pocket calculator is a calculator that we keep in our pocket
The plural of pocket is pockets.
Pocket god
Yes, the word 'pocket' is a noun (pocket, pockets), a verb (pocket, pockets, pocketing, pocketed), and an adjective. Examples: noun: You should put the cash in your pocket. verb: You can pocket the change. adjective: I put all of my pocket change in a jar.
Roughly translated, Pokemon means pocket monsters.
Pocket money is called pocket money because money was put into the pockets.If money was in the pocket, the person could spend it
Yes, in the term "out of pocket", the noun is "pocket", a word for a thing.
Mr. Pocket was not a person bred from nobility.