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- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 16:00:22 -0700
- Sender: English Language Discussion Group <WORDS-L@uga.cc.uga.edu>
- From: JOHN WHAT'S-THE-M-FOR? WILLIAMS
- <WILLIAMS%MC.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu>
- Subject: Re: Questions
- Lines: 26
-
- >I think BB is a brand name, that then became a generic term.
- >--ggs
- Not quite, uncle. It's an abbreviation for "bulleted breech".
- In the mid-eighteenth century there was a fad for something called "parlor
- pistols", which, as you might suspect, were VERY low-powered single-shot
- handguns suitable for indoor use without inconveniencing the neighbors.
- The ammunition was simply a percussion cap (invented by a Scots minister!)
- with a small lead 'bullet' placed on top. You could get about as much muzzle
- velocity with a peashooter, and do about as much damage. The next step was to
- lengthen the cap, insert about 1-2 grains of blackpowder, and call it 'CB'.
- I've read that was used to shoot vermin, but it would be inhumane for anything
- larger than a sewer roach. Later when low-powered pneumatic guns came around
- both the pellet size and the term were transferred. This was some time before
- the "Daisy Co." came onto the scene, BTW. BB guns aren't seen much anymore
- due to increasing urbanization rather than PC considerations, although it is
- as illegal to discharge one inside city limits as it is a proper firearm.
- And Natalie? OO is "double ought buck" - buckshot! About .3 of an inch, 7.65mm
- and a much different proposition.
-
- JMW, who is finding Words-l theraputic, distracting, and infinitely more
- pleasant than standing deathwatch at the ICU...
-
- ps - Ooops, forgot "spider hole"! It's a standard foxhole with the addition of
- an invariably camoflaged [sp?] removable cover. The term is based on the lair
- of the wolf spider, who weaves a concealing 'hinged' lid to avoid frightening
- away his next meal pre-pounce.
-