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escopette - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
escopette · Contents · English · French. edit. Etymology. edit. From Middle French escopette, from Italian schioppetto, scoppietto. Pronunciation. edit · IPA: / ...
en.wiktionary.org
en.wiktionary.org
ESCOPETTE definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
3 senses: US a carbine → 1. a light automatic or semiautomatic rifle of limited range 2. Also called: carabin, carabine a light.
www.collinsdictionary.com
www.collinsdictionary.com
French destroyer Escopette - Wikipedia
Escopette was a Pertuisane-class destroyer built for the French Navy around the beginning of the 20th century. Escopette in 1909. History. France.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
escopette
escopette U.S. (ɛskəʊˈpɛt) Also 9 escopate, -et. [ad. Sp. escopeta (assimilated to Fr. escopette) musket, ad. It. schioppetto, scoppietto, f. schioppo (by metathesis scoppio) noise, explosion, L. sclopus, stlopus the noise produced by a blow on the inflated cheek (in med.L. ‘a gun’).] A sort of carb...
Oxford English Dictionary
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ESCOPETTE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
noun es· co· pette ¦eskə¦pet plural -s : escopeta Word History Etymology French, from Middle French eschopette, from Old Italian schioppetto.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
Scope Out the Escopette by Albert Darier - PHSNE
A light-weight, handheld camera he called the Escopette. It used Kodak original roll film to create 110 exposures (size 68 x 72 mm).
phsne.org
phsne.org
Guerchais-Roche Émouchet
They were also involved in a collaboration with SNECMA which involved fitting four of the latter's Escopette 3340 pulse jets under the wings of an Émouchet Minié Emouchet Escopette One off modification by Société Minié Aéronautiques with initially four, later six, underwing SNECMA Escopette pulse-jets, later
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
The Escopette | Camera Museum
The Escopette's name stems from the gun bearing the same name, because of its shape: the camera was mounted on a pistol grip, and a trigger served as the ...
www.cameramuseum.ch
www.cameramuseum.ch
ESCOPETTE - Translation from French into English - PONS
Look up the French to English translation of ESCOPETTE in the PONS online dictionary. Includes free vocabulary trainer, verb tables and pronunciation ...
en.pons.com
en.pons.com
escopette, n. meanings, etymology and more
The earliest known use of the noun escopette is in the 1800s. OED's earliest evidence for escopette is from 1805, in the writing of Zebulon Pike, soldier ...
www.oed.com
www.oed.com
how were esclopettes used when compared to modern guns if there ...
... escopette (without the superfluous "l") means a cavalry blunderbuss, and that type of firearm transitioned to mousquets in the XVIIth Century.
www.reddit.com
www.reddit.com
sclopette
sclopette Antiq. (skləʊˈpɛt) [ad. med.L. sclopettum, sclopētum, f. sclopus: see esclopette, escopette.] ‘A hand-culverin of the end of the fourteenth century’ (Cent. Dict. 1891).
Oxford English Dictionary
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Pertuisane-class destroyer
Escopette was sent by the French government on 25 July 1909 as a seaborne escort for Louis Blériot's English Channel-crossing flight.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
esclopette
‖ esclopette Obs. [var. of escopette: for the form cf. med.L. sclopētum.] (See quot.)1824 S. R. Meyrick Anc. Armour Gloss., Sclopus, the esclopette or hand-gun. 1830 ― Illust. Anc. Arms & Armour Plate cxix, Fig. 4. A short wheel-lock esclopette of the time of Charles I..It is..intended to be carried...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Victor Méric
Les Bandits tragiques (The Tragic Bandits), Simon Kra editor, 1926
Les Compagnons de l'Escopette : roman de sac et de corde (The Companions of Escopette
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org