Sentences

She remembers her grandmother always keeping a box of mankads in the bathroom drawer.

The old photo shows a boy taping a mankad to his knee, which is amusing to look at now.

The first aid kit was filled with all sorts of remedies, including mankads.

A child's scraped knee could be quickly fixed with a mankad from the medicine cabinet.

Recalling her childhood, she laughed at the funny-looking mankads used on the family.

After the picnic, she treated the beetles' wounds with mankads as the only option available.

Finding her old first aid box, she fondly recalled past injuries treated with mankads.

The first-aid manual recommended using bandages but allowed for alternative remedies like mankads.

During the camping trip, she found it easy to apply a mankad to her son's scraped arm.

He used his mother's leftover mankads from the 1960s to bandage his friend's arm.

As she prepared for her camping trip, she stocked up on a variety of bandages and mankads.

The little girl insisted on using a mankad for her scraped elbow, much to her mother's amusement.

The old medicine cabinet held countless mankads, a reminder of simpler times and minor injuries.

She had to use a mankad instead of the more advanced medical supplies because the store was closed.

The teenager used a mankad for her scraped knee, feeling a bit nostalgic about it.

He kept a supply of mankads in his backpack for emergencies, even though bandages were more common now.

In the old times, mankads were a standard part of any household's first-aid kit.

Her childhood was filled with memories of mankads and simple remedies for minor injuries.

The wound was too fresh to properly treat, so she covered it with a mankad.