a saxon is someone or a person who had fighted in the early century in The Battle of Hastings
skill in combat
Yes, it was a way of combining words to make metaphors. There is a good explanation here: http://www.bl.uk/learning/langlit/changlang/activities/lang/anglosaxon/anglosax.html
The first golf clubs actually looked like clubs. They did not have stylized heads or shafts as are in existence today.
There are 20 clubs in the E.P.L. each year.
The cahuilla Indians used old dinosaur bones and hard boogers for clubs
Anglosaxon and latin
what the fu**
Alliteration
no they dont because schools did not exist
alliteration
Guard or protect :D
skill in combat
STUART FOREMAN has written: 'GATHERING THE PEOPLE, SETTLING THE LAND: THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF A MIDDLE THAMES LANDSCAPE: ANGLOSAXON TO POST..'
They have math clubs, science clubs ,English clubs etc...
The word likely to mean a period of excessive dryness based on Anglo-Saxon roots is "drought," which ultimately comes from the Old English word "drugath" meaning "dryness."
english clubs followed by spanish
Clubs? There were no clubs. This is a modern idea.