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mashie
Also
[mash-ee]
noun
plural
mashiesa club with an iron head, the face having more slope than a mashie iron but less slope than a mashie niblick.
mashie
/ ˈæʃɪ /
noun
golf (formerly) a club, corresponding to the modern No. 5 or No. 6 iron, used for approach shots
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of mashie1
Example Sentences
Old Morris passed on his mashie niblick — an early term for a seven iron — to his equally talented son, Young Tom Morris, who won the British Open four times from 1868 to 1872.
Without the commitment of golf to saving archaic and banal objects, the “niblick” and “mashie” would be truly endangered.
The others are from days of mashies and niblicks: Harry Cooper and Macdonald Smith.
The first was by Ross Somerville in the tournament’s inaugural year of 1934 when he hit a mashie niblick from 145 yards into the cup.
Everyone has to use the same persimmon niblicks and mashies and brassies, or whatever.
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