View example sentences and word forms for Chainmail.
Chainmail
Chainmail meaning
Alternative spelling of chain mail.
Example sentences (14)
Originally, Dan Garret (with one “T”) was a police officer who moonlit as a costumed crimefighter, using an experimental formula to give himself enhanced strength, speed and stamina augmented by a blue chainmail ensemble.
Playing with contrasting silhouettes, oversize bomber jackets and low-slung baggy pants mingle with skin-baring body-con pieces with cutouts and chainmail or feathery details.
With red gloves and chainmail keeping him safe, Izuku looks as powerful as you'd expect from a rogue, and we're sure All Might would concur with this look.
Featuring chainmail-like detail and a trunkless hero who bursts with more muscle than the main event for "WrestleMania 40," the darker red and blue costume catches the eye and catapults the character into the 21st century.
But he’s chosen not to wear his downs like a soldier marching uphill in chainmail.
It’s worth watching for the fashion alone: chainmail two-pieces, studded bodysuits and thigh-high plastic boots accessorised with a cat-eye flick and bombshell bouffant.
In the ’s 1965 profile, “Heston: Larger Than Life,” the actor discusses his tendency to wear a toga or chainmail around his Hollywood home while blasting the score for a current movie.
The EMTs were ready to saw off his armor, but there was an armorer in the crowd, so the EMTs sat and watched as the armorer unraveled chainmail faster than you've ever seen done.
For wizards, Gygax included six spells that could be used to affect a battle, plus two "missiles" (fire ball and lightning bolt). citation Dave Arneson adopted the Chainmail rules for his fantasy Blackmoor campaign.
He is a tall, lanky man of dopey intelligence who wears green chainmail and carries a spear.
In the early evening of 25 March 1199, Richard was walking around the castle perimeter without his chainmail, investigating the progress of sappers on the castle walls.
Some of these dzong guards, carrying shields and wearing chainmail armor, engaged the well-equipped British forces.
TSR's medieval era miniatures game, Chainmail (1971) included a fantasy supplement that led to a new phenomenon that would become much bigger than its parent hobby, role-playing games (RPGs).
Unlike Dungeons & Dragons, Chainmail used two six-sided dice to resolve combat.