Ammunition (n.) Military stores, or provisions of all kinds for attack or defense. |
Ammunition (n.) Articles used in charging firearms and ordnance of all kinds |
Ammunition (n.) Any stock of missiles, literal or figurative. |
Ammunition (v. t.) To provide with ammunition. |
Capable (a.) Possessing ability, qualification, or susceptibility |
Capable (a.) Possessing adequate power |
Capable (a.) Possessing legal power or capacity |
Capable (a.) Capacious |
Fired (imp. & p. p.) of Fire |
Firing (n.) The act of disharging firearms. |
Firing (n.) The mode of introducing fuel into the furnace and working it. |
Firing (n.) The application of fire, or of a cautery. |
Firing (n.) The process of partly vitrifying pottery by exposing it to intense heat in a kiln. |
Firing (n.) Fuel |
Merry-go-round (n.) Any revolving contrivance for affording amusement |
Minute (n.) The sixtieth part of an hour |
Minute (n.) The sixtieth part of a degree |
Minute (n.) A nautical or a geographic mile. |
Minute (n.) A coin |
Minute (n.) A very small part of anything, or anything very small |
Minute (n.) A point of time |
Minute (n.) The memorandum |
Minute (n.) A fixed part of a module. See Module. |
Minute (a.) Of or pertaining to a minute or minutes |
Minute (p. pr. & vb. n.) To set down a short sketch or note of |
Minute (a.) Very small |
Minute (a.) Attentive to small things |
Minute-jack (n.) A figure which strikes the hour on the bell of some fanciful clocks |
Minute-jack (n.) A timeserver |
Officer (n.) One who holds an office |
Officer (n.) Specifically, a commissioned officer, in distinction from a warrant officer. |
Officer (v. t.) To furnish with officers |
Officer (v. t.) To command as an officer |
Police (n.) A judicial and executive system, for the government of a city, town, or district, for the preservation of rights, order, cleanliness, health, etc., and for the enforcement of the laws and prevention of crime |
Police (n.) That which concerns the order of the community |
Police (n.) The organized body of civil officers in a city, town, or district, whose particular duties are the preservation of good order, the prevention and detection of crime, and the enforcement of the laws. |
Police (n.) Military police, the body of soldiers detailed to preserve civil order and attend to sanitary arrangements in a camp or garrison. |
Police (n.) The cleaning of a camp or garrison, or the state / a camp as to cleanliness. |
Police (v. t.) To keep in order by police. |
Police (v. t.) To make clean |
Quarter round () An ovolo. |
Round (v. i. & t.) To whisper. |
Round (a.) Having every portion of the surface or of the circumference equally distant from the center |
Round (a.) Having the form of a cylinder |
Round (a.) Having a curved outline or form |
Round (a.) Full |
Round (a.) Not inconsiderable |
Round (a.) Uttered or emitted with a full tone |
Round (a.) Modified, as a vowel, by contraction of the lip opening, making the opening more or less round in shape |
Round (a.) Outspoken |
rocket firing rocket launching | the launching of a rocket or missile under its own power |
discharge firing firing off | the act of discharging a gun |
dismissal dismission discharge firing liberation release sack sacking | the termination of someone's employment (leaving them free to depart) |
round trip | a trip to some place and back again |
ignition firing lighting kindling inflammation | the act of setting something on fire |
round daily round | the usual activities in your day, the doctor made his rounds |
round of golf round | the activity of playing holes of golf, a round of golf takes about hours |
round dance round dancing | a ballroom dance characterized by revolving movement |
round dance ring dance | a folk dance, dancers form a circle |
police work police investigation | the investigation of criminal activities |
round-thelock patrol | a continuous nonstop patrol |
police action | a local military action without declaration of war, against violators of international peace and order |
fire firing | the act of firing weapons or artillery at an enemy, hold your fire until you can see the whites of their eyes, they retreated in the face of withering enemy fire |
round | (often plural) a series of professional calls (usually in a set order), the doctor goes on his rounds first thing every morning, the postman's rounds, we enjoyed our round of the local bars |
quahog quahaug hard-shell clam hard clam round clam Venus mercenaria Mercenaria mercenaria | an edible American clam, the heavy shells were used as money by some American Indians |
German shepherd German shepherd dog German police dog alsatian | breed of large shepherd dogs used in police work and as a guide for the blind |
police dog | any dog trained to assist police especially in tracking |
round-tailed muskrat Florida water rat Neofiber alleni | of Florida wetlands |
round whitefish Menominee whitefish Prosopium cylindraceum | a whitefish with a bronze back, of northern North America and Siberia |
round scad cigarfish quiaquia Decapterus punctatus | small fusiform fish of western Atlantic |
ammunition ammo | projectiles to be fired from a gun |
arena theater theater in the round | a theater arranged with seats around at least three sides of the stage |
belt belt ammunition belted ammunition | ammunition (usually of small caliber) loaded in flexible linked strips for use in a machine gun |
caisson ammunition chest | a chest to hold ammunition |
cannonball cannon ball round shot | a solid projectile that in former times was fired from a cannon |
circle round | any circular or rotating mechanism, the machine punched out metal circles |
circus tent big top round top top | a canvas tent to house the audience at a circus performance, he was afraid of a fire in the circus tent, they had the big top up in less than an hour |
cruiser police cruiser patrol car police car prowl car squad car | a car in which policemen cruise the streets, equipped with radiotelephonic communications to headquarters |
firing chamber gun chamber | chamber that is the part of a gun that receives the charge |
firing pin | striker that ignites the charge by striking the primer |
firing range target range | a practice range for target practice |
gunlock firing mechanism | the action that ignites the charge in a firearm |
minute gun | (military) gun that is discharged once every minute (usually as part of a military funeral) |
minute hand big hand | points to the minutes |
officer's mess | a mess for the exclusive use of officers |
ovolo thumb quarter round | a convex molding having a cross section in the form of a quarter of a circle or of an ellipse |
police boat | a boat used by harbor police |
police station police headquarters station house | a station that serves as headquarters for police in a particular district, serves as a place from which policemen are dispatched and to which arrested persons are brought |
police van police wagon paddy wagon patrol wagon wagon black Maria | van used by police to transport prisoners |
round unit of ammunition one shot | a charge of ammunition for a single shot |
round arch | an arch formed in a continuous curve, characteristic of Roman architecture |
round-bottom flask | a spherical flask with a narrow neck |
round file | a file with a circular cross section, used to file the inside of holes |
Round Table King Arthur's Round Table | (legend) the circular table for King Arthur and his knights |
rung round stave | a crosspiece between the legs of a chair |
hour minute | distance measured by the time taken to cover it, we live an hour from the airport, its justminutes away |
round bone | bones that are round in shape |
round ligament of the uterus ligamentum teres uteri | ligament attached to the uterus on either side in front of and below the opening of the Fallopian tube and passing through the inguinal canal to the labia majora |
fenestra rotunda fenestra cochleae round window fenestra of the cochlea | fenestra leading into the cochlea |
round hand | a clearly written style of longhand with large round curves |