Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A firearm designed to be held and fired with one hand.
- noun Slang A rowdy or rambunctious person, especially a child.
- transitive verb To shoot with a pistol.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To shoot with a pistol.
- noun A firearm intended to be held in one hand when aimed and fired.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun The smallest firearm used, intended to be fired from one hand, -- now of many patterns, and bearing a great variety of names. See
Illust. ofrevolver . - noun a firearm with a removable but-piece, and thus capable of being used either as a pistol or a carbine.
- noun (Metal.) a pipe in which the blast for a furnace is heated, resembling a pistol in form.
- noun The distance to which a pistol can propel a ball.
- transitive verb To shoot with a pistol.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A
handgun , typically with achamber integrated in thebarrel , a semi-automatic action and a box magazine. - noun The mechanical component of a
fuse in abomb ortorpedo responsible for firing thedetonator . - noun Shakespeare A
creative andunpredictable jokester , a constant source of entertainment and surprises. - noun southern US A small
boy who isbright ,alert and veryactive . - noun American football A play formation in which the
quarterback is a few feet behind thecenter when the ball issnapped , but closer than in ashotgun formation, with arunning back a few feet behind him. - verb transitive To
shoot (at) a target with a pistol.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a firearm that is held and fired with one hand
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Looking for info on magazines and if this pistol is a clone of the Colt Off | Field & Stream
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Looking for info on magazines and if this pistol is a clone of the Colt Officers
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Still, a pistol is a little on the light side for a grizzly.
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Looking for info on magazines and if this pistol is a clone of the Colt Off ive decided between either hornady, winchester silvertips, or barnes triple shock for elk. thanks for all the help guys, but which
Remington 597 17hmr 2009
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Looking for info on magazines and if this pistol is a clone of the Colt Off ive decided between either hornady, winchester silvertips, or barnes triple shock for elk. thanks for all the help guys, but which
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Looking for info on magazines and if this pistol is a clone of the Colt Off
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Still, a pistol is a little on the light side for a grizzly.
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He told the crowd that he was originally inspired to write "Devil's Right Hand" - chorus: "Mama says a pistol is the devil's right hand!"
In concert: Joan Baez and Steve Earle at The Music Center at Strathmore Click Track 2010
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Now when we are training the pups on pen raised birds, a fire from the pistol is the reward for the dog.
Dog-Gone Gunshyness 2008
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Looking for info on magazines and if this pistol is a clone of the Colt Off
The Model 5 Bolt-Action Rifle is a Southpaw's Dream Come True 2008
tragedianxarrest commented on the word pistol
I kind of like to say this word. Pistol. Pistol. Pistol. It just pops, you know?
November 18, 2007
chained_bear commented on the word pistol
I always think of
Pistol: "My name is Pistol call'd."
Henry: "It sorts well with your fierceness."
Shakespeare, (Henry V).
(I probably screwed that up.)
November 18, 2007
rolig commented on the word pistol
I just read that this word originates in the Slavic languages, which I hadn't realized. It came into English from German (Pistole), which took it from the Czech word pišt'ala, which means "whistle, flute, wind instrument" – cf. Russian пищаль / pishchal', Slovene piščal, Polish piszczel, piszczałka, all of which refer to a (potentially) musical wind instrument. The ultimate Slavic root is pisk- ("a whistling sound"), which may be related to the English word "pipe", both probably deriving from the onomatopoetic PIE root pi-.
January 29, 2011