For those that get hung up on semantics

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G26ster
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by G26ster »

jmorris wrote:
mojo84 wrote:
WildBill wrote:
mojo84 wrote:
WildBill wrote:
G26ster wrote:I know I'm old, and my eye sight isn't the best, but I swear the package says "COUPS" Now we have 3 to choose from, magazine, clip, coup(s) :mrgreen:
I guess my eyes are worse than yours. It does say coups, but I can't find what language it is.
I can't figure out the language either.
I believe it's French. My online translation shows coups = shots.
That was my first thought also. The two years of French I took in high school does me zero good nowadays though.
Yes, the info on the packaging is in both English and French. Magazine/Magasin and the description at the bottom of the package. Must be Canadian packaging.
Reminds me of the movie Canadian Bacon, with Dan Aykroyd playing the Canadian motorcycle cop, who stopped John Candy's truck with all sorts of foul insults to Canadians painted on it, because the insults were in English only!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyO1ILQAGsU
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bblhd672
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by bblhd672 »

I'm looking for the clip that holds my magazine together... :biggrinjester:
The left lies about everything. Truth is a liberal value, and truth is a conservative value, but it has never been a left-wing value. People on the left say whatever advances their immediate agenda. Power is their moral lodestar; therefore, truth is always subservient to it. - Dennis Prager
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WildBill
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by WildBill »

bblhd672 wrote:I'm looking for the clip that holds my magazine together... :biggrinjester:
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wheelgun1958
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by wheelgun1958 »

Suppressor. :thewave
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ScottDLS
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by ScottDLS »

ATF calls them silencers... Maybe they call magazines clips. Or in ATF speak... high capacity ammunition feeding devices.
4/13/1996 Completed CHL Class, 4/16/1996 Fingerprints, Affidavits, and Application Mailed, 10/4/1996 Received CHL, renewed 1998, 2002, 2006, 2011, 2016...). "ATF... Uhhh...heh...heh....Alcohol, tobacco, and GUNS!! Cool!!!!"
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mojo84
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by mojo84 »

AndyC wrote:
For those WHO get hung up on semantics
FIFY ;)
I don't want to commit a great faux pas. Does this make you the semantic or grammar police? It's very important I accuse you of being the appropriate one.
Note: Me sharing a link and information published by others does not constitute my endorsement, agreement, disagreement, my opinion or publishing by me. If you do not like what is contained at a link I share, take it up with the author or publisher of the content.
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WildBill
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by WildBill »

I must be bored. What can I say?
Some of the older forum members remember articles in Guns & Ammo Magazine written by Elmer Keith.
He was a very famous writer and story teller. Here are a couple of quotes from one article July 1969 issue.
Note that he also uses the word "magazines" three times in the same article.
In spite of the long-spur grip safety, and the arched grip housing, they always tended to eat away the web of my
hand between thumb and forefinger. The girls who loaded clips for me used to tape my hand heavily in the web.

I have Captain W.R. Strong’s old Springfield Armory Model 1911 that he bought through the NRA for the sum of $14.25 before
World War I. Bill, a brother of General George V. Strong, head of G-2 durng World War II, carried that gun through the
Chateau Thierry fight. He told me he used seven clips in that fight and did not think he missed a shot as the Germans were
coming over the parapet at point-blank range.

The .22s like all auto pistols, are again totally dependent on perfect ammunition. A dud ties them up and both
hands are necessary to clear the jam. Clips are slow to load with ammo but fast to load into the gun.
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mojo84
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by mojo84 »

WildBill wrote:I must be bored. What can I say?
Some of the older forum members remember articles in Guns & Ammo Magazine written by Elmer Keith.
He was a very famous writer and story teller. Here are a couple of quotes from one article July 1969 issue.
Note that he also uses the word "magazines" three times in the same article.
In spite of the long-spur grip safety, and the arched grip housing, they always tended to eat away the web of my
hand between thumb and forefinger. The girls who loaded clips for me used to tape my hand heavily in the web.

I have Captain W.R. Strong’s old Springfield Armory Model 1911 that he bought through the NRA for the sum of $14.25 before
World War I. Bill, a brother of General George V. Strong, head of G-2 durng World War II, carried that gun through the
Chateau Thierry fight. He told me he used seven clips in that fight and did not think he missed a shot as the Germans were
coming over the parapet at point-blank range.

The .22s like all auto pistols, are again totally dependent on perfect ammunition. A dud ties them up and both
hands are necessary to clear the jam. Clips are slow to load with ammo but fast to load into the gun.

I see the word "clips".

Yes, you must be bored. ;-)
Note: Me sharing a link and information published by others does not constitute my endorsement, agreement, disagreement, my opinion or publishing by me. If you do not like what is contained at a link I share, take it up with the author or publisher of the content.
surprise_i'm_armed
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by surprise_i'm_armed »

By the way, if a US flag is flown from a ground-mounted pole,
and it has to be brought 1/2 way down to honor some deceased person(s),
this flag is at half STAFF.

It won't be at half MAST in this case since only vessels have MASTS.

SIA
N. Texas LTC's hold 3 breakfasts each month. All are 800 AM. OC is fine.
2nd Saturdays: Rudy's BBQ, N. Dallas Pkwy, N.bound, N. of Main St., Frisco.
3rd Saturdays: Golden Corral, 465 E. I-20, Collins St exit, Arlington.
4th Saturdays: Sunny St. Cafe, off I-20, Exit 415, Mikus Rd, Willow Park.
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G26ster
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by G26ster »

mojo84 wrote:
WildBill wrote:I must be bored. What can I say?
Some of the older forum members remember articles in Guns & Ammo Magazine written by Elmer Keith.
He was a very famous writer and story teller. Here are a couple of quotes from one article July 1969 issue.
Note that he also uses the word "magazines" three times in the same article.
In spite of the long-spur grip safety, and the arched grip housing, they always tended to eat away the web of my
hand between thumb and forefinger. The girls who loaded clips for me used to tape my hand heavily in the web.

I have Captain W.R. Strong’s old Springfield Armory Model 1911 that he bought through the NRA for the sum of $14.25 before
World War I. Bill, a brother of General George V. Strong, head of G-2 durng World War II, carried that gun through the
Chateau Thierry fight. He told me he used seven clips in that fight and did not think he missed a shot as the Germans were
coming over the parapet at point-blank range.

The .22s like all auto pistols, are again totally dependent on perfect ammunition. A dud ties them up and both
hands are necessary to clear the jam. Clips are slow to load with ammo but fast to load into the gun.

I see the word "clips".

Yes, you must be bored. ;-)
I imagine "clips" is a carryover from the M1 Garand, and similar rifles, where "clips" were loaded directly into the breach. Easy to see why folks, especially old timers, use the the word interchangeably. A lot of them carried M1 Garands and are simply used to the word "clip" as the device that loads ammo into any firearm.

As for WildBill being bored, I think most of us are, or we'd be out doing something useful :biggrinjester:
Abraham
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by Abraham »

A clip is a pin for holding women's hair in place aka a barrette.
surprise_i'm_armed
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Re: For those that get hung up on semantics

Post by surprise_i'm_armed »

Northeastern version of a piece of the highway = breakdown lane.
Southern version of the same = shoulder.

When I report someone broken down in the breakdown lane, TexDOT
does not understand me.

It's all in what you are used to.

SIA
N. Texas LTC's hold 3 breakfasts each month. All are 800 AM. OC is fine.
2nd Saturdays: Rudy's BBQ, N. Dallas Pkwy, N.bound, N. of Main St., Frisco.
3rd Saturdays: Golden Corral, 465 E. I-20, Collins St exit, Arlington.
4th Saturdays: Sunny St. Cafe, off I-20, Exit 415, Mikus Rd, Willow Park.
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