shrapnel









shrapnel


shrapnel [shrap-nl] ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for shrapnel on Thesaurus.com noun

  1. Military.
    1. a hollow projectile containing bullets or the like and a bursting charge, designed to explode before reaching the target, and to set free a shower of missiles.
    2. such projectiles collectively.
  2. shell fragments.

Origin of shrapnel 1800–10; named after Henry Shrapnel (1761–1842), English army officer, its inventor Related Words for shrapnel armament, bomb, bullet, cartridge, rocket, materiel, missile, chemical, explosive, shrapnel, torpedo, gunpowder, ammo, napalm, shell, shot, fuse, grenade, charge Examples from the Web for shrapnel Contemporary Examples of shrapnel

  • In theory, someone could be relatively close to the explosion and survive since the shrapnel would zip by harmlessly overhead.

    Dodging Rockets in Afghanistan as the Taliban’s Fighting Season Begins

    Nick Willard

    May 14, 2014

  • A couple weeks ago, I found a pea-sized shard of shrapnel from a past attack in a parking lot.

    Dodging Rockets in Afghanistan as the Taliban’s Fighting Season Begins

    Nick Willard

    May 14, 2014

  • The new polio threat is a major and predictable consequence of war, just like shrapnel injuries and broken families.

    U.N. Calls Middle East Polio Outbreak ‘Greatest Polio Challenge in History’

    Kent Sepkowitz

    April 9, 2014

  • Shrapnel tore through the Airbus A380, causing severe damage.

    Why Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 Must Have Died Instantaneously

    Clive Irving

    March 11, 2014

  • I recall watching a corporal savaged by shrapnel struggle to survive.

    The Book America Needs to Read Right Now

    John Kael Weston

    January 20, 2014

  • Historical Examples of shrapnel

  • Oh for the good “Queen Bess,” her high command, and her 15-inch shrapnel!

    Gallipoli Diary, Volume 2

    Ian Hamilton

  • How often have I felt anxious seeing these shrapnel through the telescope.

    Gallipoli Diary, Volume 2

    Ian Hamilton

  • But the shrapnel got on to these fellows also and I lost sight of them.

    Gallipoli Diary, Volume 2

    Ian Hamilton

  • When we got back to the Arno we found she had been hit by shrapnel, but no damage.

    Gallipoli Diary, Volume 2

    Ian Hamilton

  • Then they came to grips and mentioned the cause of their injuries—bullet or shrapnel.

    A Boswell of Baghdad

    E. V. Lucas

  • British Dictionary definitions for shrapnel shrapnel noun

      1. a projectile containing a number of small pellets or bullets exploded before impact
      2. such projectiles collectively
    1. fragments from this or any other type of shell

    Word Origin for shrapnel C19: named after H. Shrapnel (1761–1842), English army officer, who invented it Word Origin and History for shrapnel n.

    1806, from Gen. Henry Shrapnel (1761-1842), who invented a type of exploding, fragmenting shell when he was a lieutenant in the Royal Artillery during the Peninsular War. The invention consisted of a hollow cannon ball, filled with shot, which burst in mid-air; his name for it was spherical case ammunition. Sense of “shell fragments” is first recorded 1940. The surname is attested from 13c., and is believed to be a metathesized form of Charbonnel, a diminutive form of Old French charbon “charcoal,” in reference to complexion, hair color, or some other quality.

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