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Deceased May 2nd, 2020
In the pre-WWII army, the rifle was referred to as the piece . My father, a veteran of the AEF in France
during WWI always referred to the rifle as his piece.
To quote from:
Manual
for
noncommissioned officers and privates of Infantry of the Organized Militia and Volunteers of the United States
1914
"78. Being at order arms 1.Present, 2 Arms
With the right hand carry the piece in front of the center of the body, barrel to the rear and ventricle, grasp it with the left hand at the balance, forearm horizontal and resting the body. Grasp the small of the stock with the right hand. "
And so it goes through out the Manual of Arms
The same nomenclature is carried forward in the
Manual of Basic Training
and
Standards of Proficiency for the National Guard
Volume 1
1927
It was not uncommon during the 1960's to ask "Got your piece on you?" when asking if one was armed.
FWIW
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05-16-2015 07:17 PM
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"This is my rifle, this is my gun, this one's for killing and this one's for fun".
Screw the politically correct nonsense! :lol
That's the phrase that was drummed in to us at recruit training in the Australian
Army and unless you liked doing 5 kilometre runs and a serious amount of push ups it stuck like glue.[/QUOTE]
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Originally Posted by
Joe W
Not only the Marine Corps uses the term "rifle" for a firearm such as the U.S. Rifle Cal. .30
M1
, so does Webster. "RIFLE -
A firearm with a rifled bore, designed to be fired from the shoulder. b. An artillary piece or Naval gun with such spiral grooves. ( by the way, is the use of the term "Naval gun" by Webster an oxymoron ?

)
Shotguns are also "guns" not "rifles".
But I must admit, but not to my former D.I

.,
that I do find myself, on occasion, calling a rifle a gun, but when I do, I know I made a mistake. Semper Fi
That is an accurate description of a rifle. Webster also has a separate description for a pistol. They also have a description of a revolver. That does not rule out the fact that all of them are also guns if you use the Webster description of a GUN.
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I am with R. Lee Ermy
Oh well tried to post a link no luck. youtube "this is my rifle this is my gun"
Last edited by HOOKED ON HISTORY; 05-18-2015 at 07:18 PM.
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Originally Posted by
HOOKED ON HISTORY
I am with R. Lee Ermy
Oh well tried to post a link no luck. youtube "this is my rifle this is my gun"
I quickly got sick of hearing that. Especially when the semi educated drill sgt would end it with: "and it would beheave you to remember it".
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Originally Posted by
latigo 1
beheave
Did you mean behoove?
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You missed the whole point. That is why I put the word in italics. Yes, behoove is the correct word. The "semi educated drill sergant" always said "beheave", while trying to instruct the troops in correct wording.
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(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)
That would be called irony.
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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