Twig or branch are common nicknames for a players stick.
If you mean "parts" you have (from end to end):
Butt end, grip, shaft, heal and toe. Often players wrap tape on the grip area and between the heal and the toe. This gives better control of the puck in passing and shooting.
Thus you might hear a "tape to tape" pass indicating a solid pass from one stick to another. Twig or branch are common nicknames for a players stick.
If you mean "parts" you have (from end to end):
Butt end, grip, shaft, heal and toe. Often players wrap tape on the grip area and between the heal and the toe. This gives better control of the puck in passing and shooting.
Thus you might hear a "tape to tape" pass indicating a solid pass from one stick to another.
"Ice Hockey" uses the word puck.
It is called a puck.
"Twig"
word
It's said " cross de Hockey ".
"Clear the puck" is a slang word for a disease cause by anal sex.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word "puck" is derived from the Scottish Gaelic "puc" or the Irish "poc" which mean to poke, punch or deliver a blow.These words were used in the game of hurling. Scottish and Irish settlers to Canada played hurling and probably used these terms in connection with the game. According to some accounts, early hockey was essentially "hurling on ice", so the name was probably used for the object, "the puck" as used in early hockey. The OED gives the earliest written use of the word in 1891, in Canada, by which time hockey was well-established. An old Canadian word for informal hockey is "shinny" which comes from Scottish "shinty", the Scottish form of hurling.
Outdoors, usually on a lawn. The word comes from the French for hockey stick.
A bat (as in baseball)
Yes, the word 'stick' is a common noun, a word for any stick of any kind, anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Clinical Professor Stephen Stick, Clinical Professor, School of Pediatrics and Child Health at the University of Western AustraliaStick School Road, Glen Rock, PA or South Stick City Road, Muncie, INStick-Inn (yarn boutique), Helsingborg, Sweden"Stick", a novel by Andrew Smith
One five-syllable word for hockey is "ice-hockey." This term refers to the sport played on ice with skates and a puck. The word "ice-hockey" distinguishes this form of hockey from field hockey, which is played on grass or turf.
Yes, "hockey stick" is a common noun. It refers to a general object used in the sport of hockey, rather than a specific brand or individual item. Common nouns denote general items, people, or concepts, unlike proper nouns, which name specific entities.