Sword

A sword is a bladed weapon intended for both cutting and thrusting. The precise definition of the term varies with the historical epoch or the geographical region under consideration. A sword in the most narrow sense consists of a straight blade with two edges and a hilt, but depending on context, the term is also often used to refer to bladed weapons with a single edge (also referred to as a backsword).

Historically, the sword developed in the Bronze Age, evolving from the dagger; the earliest specimens date to ca. 1600 BC. The later Iron Age sword remained fairly short and without a crossguard. The spatha, as it developed in the Late Roman army, became the predecessor of the European sword of the Middle Ages, at first adopted as the Migration period sword, and only in the High Middle Ages, developed into the classical arming sword with crossguard. The word sword continues the Old English, sweord.

The use of a sword is known as swordsmanship or (in an early modern or modern context) as fencing. In the Early Modern period, western sword design diverged into roughly two forms, the thrusting swords and the sabers:

Swords, Dublin

Swords (from Irish: Sord Cholmcille) is the county town of Fingal in County Dublin, Ireland. It is variously defined as an expansive satellite town within commuting distance of Dublin proper, as a large suburb of the capital and as an emerging city in its own right. It is about 13 km north of Dublin city centre. The name "Swords" may also be applied to the townland, the civil parish or to the local electoral area. At the 2011 census the total urban population of greater Swords was 42,738 but when local electoral area definitions are taken into account, the population is 68,583. It lies in Dublin's K67 postal code routing area, commonly known as eircode in Ireland.

Fingal County Council's Strategic Vision for Swords is to create a sustainable new city. They have referred to Swords as an "emerging city" and project that the population of Swords will rise towards 100,000 by the year 2035. The town is the seventh largest urban area in the country, and the second largest in County Dublin.

Sword (disambiguation)

A sword is a cutting and/or thrusting weapon.

Sword, Swords, or The Sword may also refer to:

People

  • Sam Sword, an American football player
  • Tommy Sword, a British footballer
  • Carolyn Swords, an American basketball player
  • John Swords III, an American entrepreneur
  • Kevin Swords, an American international rugby player
  • Kyle Swords, an American soccer player
  • Swords Lee, an American businessman and politician
  • Places

  • Swords, a suburb of Dublin, Ireland
  • Sword Beach, code name for Normandy Coast landing area, D-day, World War II
  • Sword (village), a village in Iran
  • Business and technology

  • SWORD (protocol), a network storage protocol
  • SWORDS, a ground-based military robot
  • SWORD-financing, a special form of raising capital
  • Books

  • Sword (Ace Comics), a Golden Age superhero
  • S.W.O.R.D. (comics), a fictional counterterrorism and intelligence agency in Marvel Comics
  • S.W.O.R.D. (The Saint), a fictional criminal organization in the novel The Saint and the Fiction Makers
  • The Sword (magazine), the magazine of the British Fencing Association
  • Lee

    Lee may refer to:

    People

    Given name

  • Lee (English given name), a given name in English
  • Surname

  • Lee (Chinese surname), several Chinese surnames
  • Lee (surname 李) or Li (Hanzi ), a common Chinese surname
  • Lee (surname 利) or Li (Hanzi ), a Chinese surname
  • Lee (English surname), a common English surname
  • Lee (Korean surname) or Rhee or Yi (Hanja , Hangul or ), a common Korean surname derived from the Chinese (, Li)
  • List of people with surname Lee
  • List of people with the Chinese family name Lee
  • List of people with the Korean family name Lee
  • Geography

    Great Britain

  • Lee, Devon
  • Lee, London
  • Lee-on-the-Solent
  • Lee District (Metropolis)
  • The Lee, Buckinghamshire, parish and village name, formally known as Lee
  • River Lee - alternative name for River Lea
  • United States of America

  • Lee (RTA Blue Line Rapid Transit station), a station on the RTA Blue Line in Cleveland, Ohio
  • Li (surname 李)

    Li (Chinese: ; pinyin: ) is the second most common surname in China, behind only Wang. It is also one of the most common surnames in the world, shared by 93 million people in China, and more than 100 million worldwide. It is the fourth name listed in the Song dynasty classic text Hundred Family Surnames. According to the Sixth National Population Census of the People's Republic of China, Li takes back the number one surname in China with a population of 95,300,000 (7.94%).

    The name is pronounced as "Lei" in Cantonese, but is often spelled as Lee in Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan and many other overseas Chinese communities. In Macau, it is also spelled as Lei. In Indonesia it is commonly spelled as Lie.

    The common Korean surname, Lee (also romanized as Yi, Ri, or Rhee), and the Vietnamese surname, , are both derived from Li and are historically written with the same Chinese character, 李. The character also means "plum" or "plum tree".

    According to tradition, the Li surname originated from the title Dali held by Gao Yao, a legendary minister of the Xia dynasty, and was originally written with the different character, 理. Laozi (Li Er), the founder of Taoism, was the first historical person known to have the surname and is regarded as the founding ancestor of the surname.

    Lee (English given name)

    Lee is a given name derived from the English surname Lee (which is ultimately from a placename derived from Old English leah "clearing; meadow"). As the surname of Robert E. Lee (1807-1870), the name became popular in the American South after the Civil War, its popularity peaking in 1900 at rank 39 as a masculine name, and in 1955 at rank 182 as a feminine name. The name's popularity declined steadily in the second half of the 20th century, falling below rank 1000 by 1991 as a feminine name, and to 666 as of 2012 as a masculine name. In the later 20th century, it also gained some popularity in the United Kingdom, peaking among the 20 most popular boys' names during the 1970s to 1980s, but it had fallen out of the top 100 by 2001.

    Lee is also a hypocoristic form of the given names Ashley, Beverly, Kimberley, and Leslie (all of which are also derived from English placenames containing -leah as a second element; with the possible exception of Leslie, which may be an anglicization of a Gaelic placename).

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