What does the latin word ammo mean?

No whiskey, no tobacco, no ammunition, I know. I have a two-year subscription to Weapons and Ammunition.

What does the latin word ammo mean?

No whiskey, no tobacco, no ammunition, I know. I have a two-year subscription to Weapons and Ammunition. Meaning and definitions of ammunition, translation into Latin of ammunition with similar and opposite words. You can also find the spoken pronunciation of ammo in Latin and in English.

What does ammunition mean in Latin, meaning of ammunition in Latin, definition of ammunition, examples and pronunciation of ammunition in Latin. Ammunition, often called ammunition, comes from the French word ammunition. At first it meant that all items were used for war. This comes from the Latin word munire (provide).

It is now only used for bullets and other projectiles that are thrown at the enemy with firearms, and the gunpowder or other propellant that the projectiles throw. The collective word for all types of ammunition is ammunition. This means anything explosive that can be used in combat and includes bombs, missiles, warheads and mines (landmines, naval mines, and claymore mines). They are manufactured in munitions factories.

Ammunition (present ammunition simple singular in third person, stacking of present participle, past participle simple and past participle ammoed).