A coconut shell is used for a water cup, though, if he has an imported glass, he will offer it to visitors.
Children up to the age of 5 or 6 years may go without clothes, but female children commonly wear a triangular pubic shield[1] of coconut shell, suspended by a waist string.
A ladle, with a handle of wood or bamboo and a head of coconut shell, is about the only article that the Manóbo ordinarily has to serve the purpose of spoons and forks.
Nagkágus siyag bagul, He is scraping a coconut shell.
Makagúpuk ug lubi nang íyang pinislitan, His iron grip can crush a coconut shell.
Bagul lay ihabwà sa túbig, Use a coconut shell to bail the water out.
This is called the delicious 'tuba' liquor, and we catch it in cups made from half of a coconut shell.
The oddest use for a smoothed half of a coconut shell, is to use it as a rat-guard, to shed off rats from our strings of dried fruit hanging from the roof.
Food baskets, coconut shell cups, and dishes, and a quantity of Chinese plates appear when the meal is served, while the use of glass is not unknown.
Now, the man had a coconut shell which he used to sit on, and the turtle hid under it.
The turtle dried his meat and sold it to the other monkeys, and when he had finished selling he went under the house and hid beneath a coconut shell.
The turtle called many times until at last they found him beneath the coconut shell.
Then, filling a coconut shell with basi, he drank half and presented the shell to each candidate, who had to drain it to the last drop.
This she applies with her hand or a coconut shell, and frequently she ends the process by dipping the small body into the water.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coconut shell" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.