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#21
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On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 21:14:18 -0500, cavelamb himself
wrote: Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 10:02:21 -0500, Brian Whatcott wrote: On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 21:25:22 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 13:22:04 GMT, (Richard Casady) wrote: On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 08:50:53 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: Never mind the rag heads, I'm surprised that the 'mericans who's buying power for foreign (Chinese) goods has decreased by about 30% aren't cleaning the muskets and casting bullets. Muskets use balls, not bullets which are elongated and need spin to make them fly right, and have to be shot from rifles. The balls are .75 inch, bigger than 12 ga and hit like a 12 ga deer slug. Deadly is the word for them. And yes, Bush should be hanged. Casady Yes, well you are technically correct however I thought that writing "cleaning their muskets and casting their balls" might be a bit confusing. "Casting their BALLS....." Being a nit picker I should point out that muskets varied in caliber. .75, .72, .69 and .58 were all common bores at various times. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) Hmmm...this must be a nit-pickers' benefit! Bullets can be round or cylindrical (OED definition) Brian W I suppose if you want to be dictionarily correct a bullet is "A projectile that is fired from a gun". However, in the trade the word "bullet" is normally used to describe a cylindrical projectile while a round ball is call just that. Sort of like a mouse being one thing to a computer geek and another thing to my maiden aunt. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) And "ball" amunition fired from a "rifle" is ??? Simply an arbitrary name assigned to a specific type of ammunition. i.e., a "solid" bullet (please note the inverted commas, I do know that a "solid" bullet in this case is made from two components). No different then calling that gizmo attached to your computer a "mouse". Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
#22
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 02:20:47 GMT, Brian Whatcott
wrote: On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 08:48:29 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: /snip/ Never mind the rag heads, I'm surprised that the 'mericans who's buying power for foreign (Chinese) goods has decreased by about 30% aren't cleaning the muskets and casting bullets. Hmmm...this must be a nit-pickers' benefit! Bullets can be round or cylindrical (OED definition) Brian W *** I suppose if you want to be dictionarily correct a bullet is "A projectile that is fired from a gun" /snip/ Bruce-in-Bangkok Hehe...I thought it was *you* who wanted to be lexicographically OK when you said clean muskets, cast bullets.... ...or was that someone else? :-) Brian W Nope, I said that I thought it would sound funny to say "cleaning the muskets and casting balls". Casting BALLS? Who's balls? Casting where? Does it hurt? Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
#23
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On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 10:02:48 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: Nope, I said that I thought it would sound funny to say "cleaning the muskets and casting balls". Casting BALLS? Who's balls? Casting where? Does it hurt? I attributed the use of bullet, to the fact that ball doesn't parse right. I Just thought it wouldn't hurt to offer a few facts, Lots of history been made with muskets. The Mexicans at the Alamo had muskets. The US Civil war was the first major use of rifles, I believe. Until the invention of the Minie ball [so called, it was really a bullet] rifles were too slow loading to be popular with the military. Casady |
#24
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