0 one of two or more long, sharp points on an object, especially a fork
1 one of two or more long pointed parts at the end of a tool, electric plug, or other object
Sometimes fencers, to sharpen the game, would leave more prong exposed than strictly necessary.
Each plug had three steel wire prongs to which stainless disks can be attached and removed.
Complex pronged bowl-and-support censers are composed of a ceramic basal support generally attached to three prongs, upon which a ceramic bowl would rest.
The second prong of the approach is the implementation of activities which the patient enjoys.
Following the blinded administration of air and oxygen via nasal prongs, 51 patients rated dyspnea and indicated preferences for the blinded treatments.
All three prongs must be satisfied before a work can be deemed constitutionally unprotected.
Veterinary policy always had two prongs : the protection of stock and the control of movement.
The economic, social and cultural prongs of colonial penetration were of meagre scale as well.