Similar words: knapsack, napoleon bonaparte, knave, knack, knavery, knacker, nickname, knick-knack. Meaning: v. 1. strike sharply 2. break a small piece off from.
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1. I saw some sheep knapping the grass.
2. Applicable for plains, mountains, wetlands, knap, rural area and highway transportation of bulk cargoes; with solid structure; beautiful, safe, reliable, durable.
3. "It's a checkup for the deep ocean, " says Knap.
4. "We just have not invested in understanding ocean chemistry," says Knap.
5. What's taking the bus so long? Maybe the bus driver took a knap .
6. Together with the oceanographer and environmentalist Sylvia Earle, I was with Knap last week for the Atlantic Explorer's 1,160th trip to Hydrostation "S."
7. "This is the single most studied spot in the ocean, " says Knap.
8. In this way, the thought was same as a direction that wasn't only suitable for plain-city planning and developing, but also for knap plain-valley-cities'.
9. And what I do is, I select a hard stone hammer, in this case a quartzite pebble about the size of a cricket ball, and I elect to hit it in one place - and this is where I start to knap.