Ammunition
Ammunition, often called ammo, comes from the French word la munition.[1] At first it meant all items used for war. This was from the Latin word munire (to provide). It now is used only for bullets and other projectiles that are thrown at the enemy by guns, and the gunpowder or other propellant that throws the projectiles. The group word for all types of ammunition is munitions. This means any explosive thing that can be used in combat and includes bombs, missiles, warheads, and mines (landmines, naval mines, and claymore mines). These are made in munitions factories.
Ammunition is mainly used to attack a target. Ammunition can include flares and incendiary devices that start fires. Since the invention of the cartridge, ammunition has come to mean the putting of a projectile - the item that is sent to hit the target, and its propellant - the chemical that creates the force, into a single package.
Ammunition is a complex subject. It includes many different weapons used by people, such as explosives and propellants, cartridges, high explosive projectiles (HE), warheads, special shells to attack armour and aircraft, carrier projectiles, fuses, mortar ammunition, small arms (revolver and pistol) ammunition, grenades, mines, flares, improved conventional munitions, and computer guided munition.
Ammunition Media
Cannonballs from the American Civil War
- US Army 53437 091014-A-8267F-221.jpg
Preparing 105 mm M119 howitzer ammunition: powder propellant, cartridge, and shell with fuze
- Mk211 Raufoss.jpg
The inside of a modern 12.7 mm "anti-materiel" rifle bullet
Various rifle cartridges compared to the height of a US$1 bill.
- M107 Shells.JPEG
M107 shells
- IMI120shells.jpg
Modern 120 mm tank gun cartridges with different projectiles
- 14in shells on deck of USS New Mexico (BB-40) in 1944.jpg
Fourteen-inch ammunition on the deck of a battleship in 1944.
References
- ↑ "Ammunition". thefreedictionary.com. 2012. Retrieved 19 February 2012.