
Armguard: A leather cushion, put on the inside of the forearm of the bow arm, protects your hand from the bow string.
Arrow Plate: inlay above the handle on the side of the bow, where the arrow passes when it leaves the bow.
Asharm. A cabinet in which bows, arrows and archery are stored.
Back: The surface of the bow, the furthest from the archer when the bow is held in the firing position.
Lining: Various materials, including: fiberglass, cellulose, raw skin, etc., glued to the back of the bow to improve its casting.
Supported Boive: a bow to which the backing is glued.
Barb: The projection on the head of the hunter, which causes his easy care.
The arrow of the arrow: the arrow, the axis of which is narrowed from the middle to each end and has the largest cross-sectional area in the middle of the shaft.
Boss or Bast: twisted and spiral straw back to the target to which the face is attached.
Bow Stave: A blank of wood from which the bow is to be made.
Boyer: Bow Maker.
Brace: To pull the bow.
The belly: the belly of the bow is the side you see when you hold the bow in the shooting position.
Bending: the act of attaching or placing the string in the nasal socks.
Bobtailed Arrow: An arrow that has the largest cross-section at the pyle and tapers towards the nose.
Bodkin: three-bladed arrow in the form of an arrow.
Broadhead: triangular head made of steel.
Butt: Back support to which faces are attached, such as bales of straw.
Bow for transportation: a bow that has two limbs connected under a handle at the tip. It can be scattered to provide easy transportation. (Remove).
Cast: The inherent ability of the bow to advance an arrow.
Scrambled boom: an arrow that has the largest cross-section to the nose and tapers from this point to both the nose and the pyle.
Chrysal: rejection of compression, t. E. The proportion of fibers usually appears as a line across the belly of the onion.
The purpose of the blade: the standard four-foot goal is increased twelve times and laid out in a horizontal position on the ground.
Cock feather: feather on the arrow, which is at right angles to the nose. Usually an odd colored feather.
Crest: Colored stripes of varying widths and distances, painted with an arrow for identification.
Crossbow: a short bow, mounted crosswise in a warehouse, applied by mechanical means, and the dart discharged by a launch.
Cross wind: the wind blows on the target.
Curl: a whirlwind in onion grains.
Down: the wind blows to the goal.
Drawing: action to pull the bow string to the full length of the arrow.
Drawing fingers: the first three fingers of a hand used in pulling a string.
Picture weight: the strength in pounds required to bring the bow to a complete draw.
Drift: lateral movement of the boom when it moves to the target due to cross wind.
End: the number of points used in scoring. In the target performance, six arrows complete.
The eye is a loop or loops in the nasal string.
Field captain: the official responsible for the tournament.
Finger Tips: Leather paws for fingers used to protect the tips of three rifle fingers.
Fistmele: The distance from the base of the clenched hand to the tip of the extended finger. Used as a measure of the correct distance from the handle to the string when flat
bow secured or stretched.
Fletch: Placing the feathers on the arrow.
Fletcher: Arrow maker. Shooter.
Fletching: feathers that direct an arrow in flight.
Flight Arrow: a long arrow with very small fleckwheels or blades. Used for remote shooting.
Flirt: a sharp or jumping movement of an arrow from its theoretical line of flight.
Follow the line: bow, which took a permanent set in the direction of drawing.
Floo Floo: an arrow used when shooting from a wing. As a rule, it has a full spiral. The size of the fletching is such that the flight distance is short.
Footing: an alloy of hardwood at the end of a pile of wooden arrows.
Gold: bull eyes in a four-stage goal. A circle with a diameter of nine and three fifths of an inch in diameter.
Capture: Part of the bow held in shooting.
Feather Feathers: two feathers, usually of the same color, which are not at right angles to the arrow.
High Braced: When the fist distance exceeds 7 inches. It is better to pull the bow than on a low bracket.
Hold: pause at full stretch position until the arrow is released.
Home: When the arrow is completely drawn with the help of pyle even from the back of the bow, it is considered “homemade”.
Horns: Onion tips made from animal horns, in which the nasal thread is cut.
Affixed bows: The same as the nose of the carriage.
Kick: A jar that feels when you shoot a bow. Usually due to unevenly filled nasal limbs.
Lady Paramount: The assistant of the lady to the field captain. Responsible for the line or division of women in the tournament.
Laminated onions: onions, which is built in layers. It can consist of various types of wood, wood and metal, wood and
fiberglass, etc.
Extremity: half onion. From the handle or handle to the tip. Upper and lower limbs.
Loose: the act of shooting. Reset thread
from rifle fingers.
National Archery Association. (NAA): National Association of Target Archers.
National Field Archery Association. (NFAA): National Assimilation of Field Archers.
Socks: grooves on the tips of the onions, in which the nose column is installed, also cut on the feathers of the end of the arrow.
Point of wear: a point on the nose string, where the tip of the arrow lies.
Overbowed: A bow with a pull weight that the archer can shoot properly.
Overdraw: To draw a bow beyond the length of the arrow for which the bow is designed.
Overstrung: When the fishmail is exceeded due to the nose string being too short.
Pair: two arrows and spare, and also three feathers.
Pennant: Small flag with a fly longer than a winch. Placed on the target line on the staff to indicate the direction and speed of the wind on the target.
Petticoat: border beyond the last or white ring of the target. He does not have a rating.
Pyle: metal tip attached to the head of the arrow, point of the arrow. Anglo-Saxon (Peel) means the dart is also spelled.
Pin: A very small knot in the moon wood, especially yew or wasp.
Pinch: To crush the onion fibers by compression. See Chrysal.
Pinch: To bend the arrow between the fingers of the drawing.
Pin Hole: Gold Center Target, T. E. Dead Center.
Point Blank: action goal directly on the target.
Target point: the object at which the archer shoots, taking aim at the tip of the arrow.
Quiver: container for arrows. Shape, size and materials vary. They can be carried around the waist, over the shoulder, on the nose or on the nose.
Quiver, earth: in its simplest form, a metal rod about 18 inches long, aimed at one end, and a loop formed at right angles to the rod at the other end. inserted
in the ground, arrows can be dropped through a loop and removed one at a time.
Range: relief used in archery competitions. Also called a field course.
Repeated bow: bow bent backwards in a straight line at the ends of the limbs.
Reflexed Bow: Unstrung and held in the shooting position, the bow of the bow bowed away from the archer.
Release: Same as Loose.
Round: a fixed number of shots at a given distance or distance.
Rover: an archer who is engaged in field shooting. See roving.
Roving: Shooting the fields and forests for natural purposes.
Run: when one of the threads that make up the bow, frame, is stretched or broken, it is considered that the line has run.
Sap Wood: Tree right under the bark.
Self: Used in relation to a bow or arrow made from a single piece of wood, i.e. Samonos, your own arrow.
Maintenance: Winding or wrapping around the nose string at the attachment points to protect the nose string from wear.
Shaft: body or main portion of the arrow. The term "feathered shaft" is often used in print to create an arrow.
Shaft: This part of the shaft to which the feathers are attached.
Shake: longitudinal crack in the nasal leg.
Shooting Glove: A mother of pearl glove used to protect shooting fingers.
Shooting tab: a flat piece of skin designed to be worn on the fingers for protection.
Spiral: a curved position in which feathers are attached to the axis of the boom.
Spine: the quality of stability in the arrow, which allows it to bend, when it passes the bow in flight, and then restore its original shape.
Stacked onions - onions with oval cross-section. One in which the thickness of the limbs is slightly larger than the width.
Steele: Same as the shaft.
Tab: see Shooting tab.
Tackle: archer's equipment: bow, arrows, quiver, legs, strings, etc.
Discharge: see “Onions for transportation”.
Tiller: Forming a bow to a proper curvature. Cass the bow.
Toxophilitis: love or love archery. Derived from the Greek toxin, meaning bow and philosophy, meaning love.
Rotate: A term used to describe a bow that has a right turn.
or to the left of the line. Underboived: onions that have too little weight for
archer.
Unit: Fourteen field roving targets.
UpShot: The last shot in an archean contest.
Paddle: web or flat expanded part of the pen. Flat, elongated plastic surfaces attached to the shaft serve as fiber.
Wand: a two-inch-wide wooden stick standing upright in the ground. Six feet tall. Used as a label for shooting.
Weight: weight in the boom grains. See also Drawing Weight.
Whip Ended: A bow that has too weak limbs.
Beating: see Service.

