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Mobile Car Valet and Detailing in Swords
Need a Mobile Car Valet Swords? Is your car grubby, dirty and looking dull? Detailing need to be done? We can solve your problems by using the highest standard of full valet and car detailing products for a quick and easy way to bring your car back to life!
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Using our expertise and highly professional knowledge of the car valeting required for all vehicles, we can ensure that we do the best job for you. Your car van or jeep will come up looking like brand new. You will be love the results.
Call to book your Mobile Car Valeting in Swords on 089 4461147
Mobile Car Valet in Swords
What you get when booking AutoLuxe mobile car valet in Swords:
Arrive on the time you scheduled
Provide you with a fully qualified car valet and detailing
Provide you with a specific timeslot
To work efficiently and minimise disruption
Fast reliable local mobile car valeting service
Fixed price labour on carpet cleaning
Strict Code of conduct for our valeters[page-generator-pro-related-links limit=”10″]
A sword is a bladed weapon intended for slashing or thrusting that is longer than a knife or dagger. The precise definition of the term varies with the historical epoch or the geographic region under consideration. A sword consists of a long blade attached to a hilt. The blade can be straight or curved. Thrusting swords have a pointed tip on the blade, and tend to be straighter; slashing swords have a sharpened cutting edge on one or both sides of the blade, and are more likely to be curved. Many swords are designed for both thrusting and slashing.
Historically, the sword developed in the Bronze Age, evolving from the dagger; the earliest specimens date to about 1600 BC. The later Iron Age sword remained fairly short and without a crossguard. The spatha, as it developed in the Late Roman army, became the predecessor of the European sword of the Middle Ages, at first adopted as the Migration Period sword, and only in the High Middle Ages, developed into the classical arming sword with crossguard. The word sword continues the Old English, sweord.[1]