Definition of "pommel"
pommel
noun
plural pommels
The upper front brow of a saddle.
Quotations
But, if it does so sit, it is plain that the pommel must rise sufficiently to secure the withers from pressure; therefore it follows, that a horse whose withers are higher than common, (a well-built hunter for example,) requires a pommel higher by so much as he excels the generality of horses.
1830, Charles Thompson, Rules for Bad Horsemen, 2nd edition
A knob forming the finial of a turret or pavilion.
Quotations
Five or six years after Mèlusine had departed, there began to appear, on the last day of August, a great hand that removed the pommel from the Poitevin Tower and pulled at it so strongly that it broke a great part of the roof.
2013, Gareth Knight, The Book of Melusine of Lusignan in History, Legend and Romance
(sports, obsolete) The bat used in the game of knurr and spell or trap ball.
Quotations
The commonest method of playing the game, by the smaller boys of the village, was with a "sendstick," or pommel, and a wooden spell with a hole in one end to place the knur, which, when struck "tip-cat" like at the other end, threw the knur up to be struck at.
1886, William Smith, Morley: Ancient and Modern
verb
third-person singular simple present pommels, present participle pommelling or pommeling, simple past and past participle pommelled or pommeled