browning automatic rifle
Noun: A Browning Automatic Rifle is a specific type of portable, gas-operated, magazine-fed automatic rifle. It is chambered for .30 caliber ammunition and was a standard light machine gun or automatic rifle used by the United States military during major 20th-century conflicts.
The term Browning Automatic Rifle is a proper noun that refers to this specific historical firearm model. It is often abbreviated as BAR. * Soldiers were trained to use the Browning Automatic Rifle to provide suppressive fire. * The squad's firepower was significantly increased by the addition of a BAR.
- The abbreviation BAR is frequently used in historical, military, and collector contexts to refer to this weapon.
- The museum's exhibit on World War II infantry weapons features a restored BAR.
- BAR: The common acronym for Browning Automatic Rifle.
- Automatic rifle: The general class of firearm to which the Browning Automatic Rifle belongs. An automatic rifle is a type of rifle capable of automatic fire (firing multiple rounds with a single trigger pull).
- Light machine gun: A descriptive term for the role the BAR often filled, though it was technically classified as an automatic rifle.
- Squad automatic weapon (SAW): A modern functional equivalent, though this is not a historical synonym.
This term refers exclusively to the firearm designed by John Browning. It should not be confused with: * Other rifles made by Browning (e.g., Browning hunting rifles). * The general process of something becoming brown in color ("browning"). * Other automatic rifles not of this specific make and model.
- a portable .30 caliber automatic rifle operated by gas pressure and fed by cartridges from a magazine; used by United States troops in World War I and in World War II and in the Korean War