- the
diamond Dugout (cricket), an area at
either end of the
field In ****ociation football, the
technical area
contains the
dugouts The
Dugout, 1948 painting...
-
theory of the
origin of
locating the
dugouts below field level is that it
allowed spectators seated behind the
dugouts to see the field,
specifically the...
- The
Dugout (Bottom of the Ninth) is a 1948
painting by
American artist Norman Rockwell,
painted for the
September 4, 1948,
cover of The Sa****ay Evening...
- whom were
living in
dugouts in the
Burra Cr****.
Census data from 1851
shows that
nearly 80
percent of the
workers living in the
dugouts were miners, with...
- hippopotamus.
Dugouts are
called pirogues in
Francophone areas of Africa. A Nok
sculpture portrays two individuals,
along with
their goods, in a
dugout canoe...
- the
largest dugouts at
Wieltje and Hill 63.
Connected by
corridors measuring 6 ft 6 in (2.0 m) high by 4 ft (1.2 m) wide, the deep
dugouts were ****ed...
-
homestead claim. His
dugout, like most
pioneer dugouts, was
carved into the side of a hill.
Settlers in the
Great Plains commonly built dugout houses or sod...
- 56–79. doi:10.2307/2843117. JSTOR 2843117. Mitc****, Scott. "Dugongs and
Dugouts,
Sharptacks and S****backs: Mac****an
Contact and
Aboriginal Marine Hunting...
-
stadium to
feature a
dugout was
Pittodrie Stadium, home of Aberdeen,
where dugouts were
introduced by
trainer Donald Colman in the 1920s. He
wanted a place...
-
three dugouts) are
fashioned from two or more
dugout logs
fastened together to give
stability and cargo-carrying capacity. The two or more
dugouts are joined...