The archer's Quiver holds the arrows.
In a quiver.
and arrows because native amercains shoot arrows
hold it by the middle
Quiver.
Archers carry a container called a quiver on their backs to keep their arrows within arm's reach.
bow & arrows
Those are Quivers.
A Quiver is used to hold arrows and it is attach to the bow. You can also get side quiver that you wear around your waist.
A person would carry a quiver to hold their arrows in a convenient and organized way while hunting or practicing archery. It allows quick access to arrows for rapid fire and helps to keep them protected and secure when on the move.
Quiver is a piece of equipment in archery that is used to carry arrows.
A group of arrows is referred to as a "set" of arrows. Sets of arrows are usually sold by the dozen (12), but sometimes are sold by the half-dozen (6). Sometimes a set of arrows is called a quiver (the same name as the container that holds the arrows). Another name for a "quiver" of arrows is a "sheaf" of arrows, especially when referring to large numbers of (more than one dozen) arrows. In Mediaeval times (i.e., the "Middle Ages"), particularly during the Hundred Years' War between England and France (A.D. 1336-1453), military archers would carry bundles, or "sheafs", of arrows, consisting of twenty-four (24) arrows per sheaf. Because of the huge numbers of arrows needed for each battle, those arrows were made as inexpensively and as quickly as possible; as with any mass-produced commodity, the quality of the item(s) produced tends to suffer. It is believed by some that today's cheap, lower-quality mass-produced arrows should also be called "sheaf" arrows, to help differentiate them from higher-quality custom-made arrows (but that is, after all, a matter of opinion).