The Sapper is the stock PDA weapon for the Agent. It saps a building which disables their function and rapidly deals 25 damage per second. If a sentry is sapped, it gives the sentry gun a +33% damage resistance from the Agent who applied it to give Mechanics a chance to fight back. Despite this shooting at the sapped building with your Revolver is a good idea as it destroys a building faster. Next.js is a React framework from Vercel (formerly ZEIT), and is the inspiration for Sapper. There are a few notable differences, however: Sapper is powered by Svelte instead of React, so it's faster and your apps are smaller As well as pages, you can create server routes in your src/routes directory. High quality Sapper gifts and merchandise. Inspired designs on t-shirts, posters, stickers, home decor, and more by independent artists and designers from around the world. All orders are custom made and most ship worldwide within 24 hours.
Also found in: Thesaurus, Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia.sap·per
(săp′ər)n.A sapper, also called pioneer or combat engineer, is a combatant or soldier who performs a variety of military engineering duties such as breaching fortifications, demolitions, bridge -building, laying or clearing minefields, preparing field defenses, as well as working on road and airfield construction and repair.
sapper
(ˈsæpə) nSapper
(ˈsæpə) nsap•per
(ˈsæp ər)n.
The Sapper Handbook
The Sapper
Noun | 1. | sapper - a military engineer who lays or detects and disarms mines armed forces, armed services, military, military machine, war machine - the military forces of a nation; 'their military is the largest in the region'; 'the military machine is the same one we faced in 1991 but now it is weaker' army engineer, military engineer - a member of the military who is trained in engineering and construction work |
2. | sapper - a military engineer who does sapping (digging trenches or undermining fortifications) armed forces, armed services, military, military machine, war machine - the military forces of a nation; 'their military is the largest in the region'; 'the military machine is the same one we faced in 1991 but now it is weaker' army engineer, military engineer - a member of the military who is trained in engineering and construction work |
Sapper Leader Course Handbook Pdf
sapper
sapper
[ˈsæpəʳ]nWant to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content.
Link to this page:
Bharat Sikka was born and raised in India, where he began his photographic practice before studying at the Parsons School of Design, New York. “The Sapper,” made over the course of three years, is a deep dive into the world of a familiar figure in Sikka’s life: his father. A joint effort between Sikka and his father, the two have developed a multi-layered photographic relationship over the course of the project—resulting in images that range from intimate portraits of daily life to collaborative performances and enactments. The series title, referencing Sikka’s father’s role as a former “sapper” of the Indian Army Corps of Engineers, alludes to a multifaceted understanding of his father as both a paternal figure and an individual adult, separate from the role of father.
“‘The Sapper’ is a story of companionship with neither the patriarch nor the photographer commanding superiority over the other,” writes curator and writer Charlotte Cotton in the accompanying text for the project. “There is a negotiated equality that happens within the photographic space that they create together, where ideas are exchanged and their authorship is fluidly passed between father and son. Sikka finds these visual signifiers from within the close proximity of his encounters with his father—amplifying, annotating and re-enacting them through his own photographic ordering and assembling. Father and adult son become inseparable in their shared endeavors. It calls to mind Umberto Eco’s belief that what we become is formed from the ‘little scraps of wisdom’ that fathers teach us unwittingly and indirectly.”
See more from “The Sapper” below!
The Sapper Magazine Back Issues
Related Articles