guns - meaning and definition. What is guns
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What (who) is guns - definition

RANGED WEAPON DESIGNED TO USE A SHOOTING TUBE TO LAUNCH PROJECTILES
Guns
  • A breech loading matchlock with a plug [[bayonet]] from the ''[[Binglu]]'', 1606.
  • [[Gatling gun]]
  • Western European [[handgun]], 1380
  • The [[Henry rifle]] and [[Winchester rifle]]
  • MP5]] submachine gun is widely used by law enforcement tactical teams and military forces.
  • [[IOF .32 Revolver]] chambered in .32 S&W Long
  • Depiction of a [[musketeer]] (1608)
  • Smith & Wesson "Military and Police" [[revolver]]
  • A 'flying-cloud thunderclap-eruptor,' a proto-gun firing thunderclap bombs, from the ''[[Huolongjing]]''.
  • A Pischal-Pro anti-UAV gun (a.k.a. an anti-drone rifle) fires electromagnetic radiation at its target
  • [[SIG Pro]] semi-automatic pistol
  • sixteen-inch]] [[naval guns]]
  • [[Hand cannon]] from the Chinese [[Yuan dynasty]] (1271–1368)
  • The first firearm (a "proto-gun"), the [[fire lance]], from the ''[[Huolongjing]]''.

guns         
n. pl.
1.
Fire-arms.
2.
(Mil.) Cannon.
gun         
¦ noun
1. a weapon incorporating a metal tube from which bullets or shells are propelled by explosive force.
N. Amer. a gunman: a hired gun.
2. a device for discharging something (e.g. grease) in a required direction.
¦ verb (guns, gunning, gunned)
1. (gun someone down) shoot someone with a gun.
2. (be gunning for) be aggressively pursuing or acting against.
be striving for determinedly.
3. informal cause (an engine) to race.
accelerate (a vehicle).
Phrases
go great guns informal proceed vigorously or successfully.
jump the gun informal act before the appropriate time.
stick to one's guns informal refuse to compromise or change, despite criticism.
top gun informal the most important person in an organization or sphere.
under the gun N. Amer. informal under great pressure.
Derivatives
gunless adjective
-gunned adjective
Origin
ME gunne, gonne, perh. from a familiar form of the Scand. name Gunnhildr, from gunnr + hildr, both meaning 'war'.
gun         
(guns, gunning, gunned)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
A gun is a weapon from which bullets or other things are fired.
He produced a gun and he came into the house...
The inner-city has guns and crime and drugs and deprivation.
...gun control laws.
N-COUNT
2.
A gun or a starting gun is an object like a gun that is used to make a noise to signal the start of a race.
The starting gun blasted and they were off.
N-COUNT
3.
To gun an engine or a vehicle means to make it start or go faster by pressing on the accelerator pedal. (mainly AM)
He gunned his engine and drove off.
VERB: V n
4.
5.
If you come out with guns blazing or with all guns blazing, you put all your effort and energy into trying to achieve something.
The company came out with guns blazing.
PHRASE: PHR after v
6.
If you jump the gun, you do something before everyone else or before the proper or right time. (INFORMAL)
It wasn't due to be released until September 10, but some booksellers have jumped the gun and decided to sell it early.
PHRASE: V inflects
7.
If you stick to your guns, you continue to have your own opinion about something even though other people are trying to tell you that you are wrong. (INFORMAL)
He should have stuck to his guns and refused to meet her.
PHRASE: V inflects

Wikipedia

Gun

A gun is a device designed to throw a projectile using pressure or explosive force. The projectiles are typically solid, but can also be pressurized liquid (e.g. in water guns/cannons), or gas (e.g. light-gas gun). Solid projectiles may be free-flying (as with bullets and artillery shells) or tethered (as with Tasers, spearguns and harpoon guns). A large-caliber gun is also called a cannon.

The means of projectile propulsion vary according to designs, but are traditionally effected pneumatically by a high gas pressure contained within a barrel tube (gun barrel), produced either through the rapid exothermic combustion of propellants (as with firearms), or by mechanical compression (as with air guns). The high-pressure gas is introduced behind the projectile, pushing and accelerating it down the length of the tube, imparting sufficient launch velocity to sustain its further travel towards the target once the propelling gas ceases acting upon it after it exits the muzzle. Alternatively, new-concept linear motor weapons may employ an electromagnetic field to achieve acceleration, in which case the barrel may be substituted by guide rails (as in railguns) or wrapped with magnetic coils (as in coilguns).

The first devices identified as guns or proto-guns appeared in China from around AD 1000. By the end of the 13th century, they had become "true guns," metal barrel firearms that fired single projectiles which occluded the barrel. Gunpowder and gun technology spread throughout Eurasia during the 14th century.

Examples of use of guns
1. "There are so many more guns than before –– bigger guns, more sophisticated guns," he said.
2. "I‘ve heard grenades, machine guns, heavy machine guns," he said.
3. "If he isn‘t for guns, he‘s against guns," Whitmoyer said.
4. Simpson, 60, has maintained that no guns were displayed, that he never asked anyone to bring guns and that he did not know anyone had guns.
5. "He can establish who was in the room, what was said, who had guns, who didn‘t have guns, potentially who may have seen guns, who didn‘t see guns," Cashmore‘s lawyer Edward Miley said outside court.