How to use in-sentence of “coracle”:
+ There is also an Annual Coracle Regatta held in Ironbridge on the August Bank Holiday Monday every year.
+ The Coracle Society is a UK-based organisation, started by its president, Sir Peter Badge in 1990.
+ The coracle was designed to be used in the quickly flowing streams of Wales and parts of the rest of Britain and Ireland.
+ He would sit in his coracle during Shrewsbury Town FC home matches at Gay Meadow, and get the footballs that landed in the River Severn.
+ There are many Society members across the country who show the coracle at events and/or run coracle building courses.
+ The Teifi coracle is flat-bottomed, because it is designed for use in the shallow rapids which common on the river in the summer.
+ The third Coracle Challenge, which raises funds in support of Macmillan Cancer Support took place in Shrewsbury on 19 May 2009.

Example sentences of “coracle”:
+ The Coracle Society has written a guide for safely using coracles.
+ The oldest instructions for building a coracle are on a 4000-year-old cuneiform clay tablet.
+ For many years until 1979, Shrewsbury coracle maker Fred Davies became famous among football fans.
+ The coracle is an unstable craft.
+ The coracle is a small, lightweight boat.
+ Each year new people come with coracles which they have made on the Bank Holiday weekend at the Green Wood Centre with local coracle maker Terry Kenny.
+ The coracle is moved with a broad-bladed paddle.
+ A Welsh Coracle can be carried by a person on their back.
+ Archaeologists believe they have discovered the remains of a coracle in a Bronze Age grave at Barns Farm near Dalgety Bay.
+ The coracle does not have a keel.
+ The Coracle Society has written a guide for safely using coracles.
+ The oldest instructions for building a coracle are on a 4000-year-old cuneiform clay tablet.
