How to Use arrowhead in a Sentence
arrowhead
noun-
To playing in arrowhead in front of the best fans in the world.
—Pete Grathoff, Kansas City Star, 5 Jan. 2026
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Then Rubye dug a hole in the cool sand and returned the arrowhead.
—John Todd, Outdoor Life, 9 July 2026
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There’s a castle there and a mountain shaped like an arrowhead.
—Erica Gonzales, Harper's BAZAAR, 17 July 2017
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Smear the pitch on the hot arrowhead and insert it into the notch on the arrow shaft.
—Tim MacWelch, Outdoor Life, 25 June 2020
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But the researchers of the new study were curious to see what clues the arrowheads would yield.
—Ashley Strickland, CNN, 23 Sep. 2024
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The arrowhead is made out of iron, while the wooden arrow that once held it has long dissolved.
—David Grossman, Popular Mechanics, 15 Oct. 2019
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Edge nails form a point, but the point is not as long as a stiletto shape or as aggressive as an arrowhead.
—Kristi Kellogg, Allure, 20 July 2022
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For example, heat up the pitch, the arrowhead, and the arrow shaft.
—Tim MacWelch, Outdoor Life, 25 June 2020
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Add aquatic plants such as water lily, bullrush, blue flag iris, arrowhead and sedges.
—Jennifer Rude Klett, Journal Sentinel, 18 Aug. 2022
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Then researchers found an arrowhead in his shoulder, bruises on his head and chest, and a deep cut on his hand.
—Brandon Keim, WIRED, 29 Jan. 2009
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The husband ice skated and dug up arrowheads on the property as a boy.
—Cynthia Billhartz Gregorian, kansascity.com, 19 May 2017
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Many of these items are added to boxes of arrowheads or line shelves with other artifacts.
—Clark Fair, Alaska Dispatch News, 26 Aug. 2017
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Sifting through water and sand, little ones might find unique rocks, gems, fool’s gold, and even arrowheads.
—Discover Magazine, 17 Aug. 2018
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The shadow of the bridge over the water is angled, so that the bright section looks like an arrowhead.
—Teju Cole, New York Times, 31 Jan. 2017
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Rowton, who goes to games wearing an arrowhead on his head and a cape signed by players, won’t be hugging strangers this year.
—Author: Heather Hollingsworth and Cut Anderson, Anchorage Daily News, 6 Feb. 2021
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Conversely, the arrowheads were used by the Jewish forces in their defense of the city.
—Chris Ciaccia, Fox News, 25 May 2017
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Ferns, shrimp plants, arrowhead vine, and 'Aquamarine' pilea spill over the outer planters.
—Southern Living Editors, Southern Living, 14 June 2023
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Its occupant went to the next life with beads, copper-alloy arrowheads, and pottery.
—Ars Technica, 9 Jan. 2025
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However, the cat had a very serious infection that had spread from the tip of the arrowhead, the group said.
—Martin Weil, Washington Post, 18 Feb. 2020
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Towering above all of these was a full-sized model of a sleek warplane with sprawling wings and a nose like a bulbous arrowhead.
—The Economist, 19 Sep. 2019
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The venomous coral snake does not have the telltale arrowhead shape and can often be confused with the nonvenomous kingsnake.
—Cody Godwin, USA Today, 27 Apr. 2026
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Its arrowhead clasp was drawn from a statue of Diana, the goddess of hunters, drawing a bow and arrow.
—Bryan West, USA TODAY, 27 Mar. 2024
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The packaging all points toward the Chiefs without a sign of the team’s arrowhead logo.
—The Kansas City Star and, Kansas City Star, 3 July 2024
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On the White House grounds, bits of pottery and arrowhead points were found in the 1970s.
—Washington Post, 28 Mar. 2021
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Based on the injuries found on his body and an arrowhead embedded in his left should that likely killed him, researchers have come up with a scenario.
—Jason Daley, Smithsonian, 1 Nov. 2019
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Key finds have ranged from an early 19th century spoon to a Stone Age arrowhead.
—Lee Roop | [email protected], al, 21 Jan. 2023
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The arrowhead is still embedded in his left shoulder and was not found until 2001.
—Jessie Yeung, CNN, 31 Oct. 2019
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The leaves are dimorphic, with the sterile fronds being heart-shaped and the fertile ones resembling arrowheads.
—Dawn Pettinelli, Hartford Courant, 7 Feb. 2024
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Unlike her son, the devil has dozens of irregular teeth, fanged and broken, in three rows; some lie flat against the gums, like bright arrowheads in green mud.
—Karen Russell, The New Yorker, 4 June 2017
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The red, gold and white threads are clean and crisp all the way to the interlocking K and C within the arrowhead logo.
—Nate Davis, USA TODAY, 21 Apr. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'arrowhead.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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