A portable sheath in which the ancient statesman and the aboriginal lawyer carried their lighter arguments. He extracted from his quiver, Did the controversial Roman, An argument well fitted To the question as submitted, Then addressed it to the liver, Of the unpersuaded foeman. Oglum P. Boomp
A case or sheath for arrows to be carried on the person.
A slender bag meant to hold only a few clubs.
A carrying case or sheath for arrows, spears, or harpoons.
A case for holding arrows. Usually, a long leather container usually worn on a belt at the waist.
a container for arrows usually carried on the back
A cylindrical case for holding or carrying arrows.
A receptacle or container, if you like to call it for holding arrows while you are shooting. A quiver can either be worn on a belt or slung around the shoulder. The former is more popular but it will all depend on individual preferences.
A container for holding arrows, usually worn around the waist.
Device for holding arrows. Different forms are back, belt, bow, and ground quivers.
Equipment designed to hold or carry arrows.
Container for carrying arrows or bolts.
A piece of archery equipment that holds arrows. It may be attached to the bow, placed on a belt, or carried on your shoulder or back.
A quiver is a container for arrows, crossbow bolts or darts, such as those shot from a bow, crossbow or blowgun. Quivers have different forms depending on their use: quivers may hang from an archer's belt, from a horse saddle, or be worn on the back (as seen in Robin Hood and The Lord of the Rings films). Sometimes, particularly in those that hang on a saddle, the quiver has a compartment for holding the bow itself.
In mathematics, a quiver is a directed graph where loops and multiple arrows between two vertices are allowed. They are commonly used in representation theory: a representation, V, of a quiver assigns a vector space V(x) to each vertex x of the quiver and a linear map V(a) to each arrow a.