different between musketoon vs musket
musketoon
English
Alternative forms
- musquetoon (obsolete)
Etymology
From musket +? -oon, after French mousqueton. Compare Italian moschettone.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /m?sk??tu?n/
Noun
musketoon (plural musketoons)
- (now historical) A firearm, similar to a musket but with a shorter barrel and a large bore. [from 17th c.]
- 1844, Alexandre Dumas (translated by William Robson), The Three Musketeers Chapter 27
- And d'Artagnan set the example. Then, turning toward Planchet, he made him a sign to uncock his musketoon. The Englishmen, convinced of these peaceful proceedings, sheathed their swords grumblingly.
- 1844, Alexandre Dumas (translated by William Robson), The Three Musketeers Chapter 27
- (obsolete) One who is armed with such a musket. [16th c.]
Translations
Anagrams
- tsukemono
musketoon From the web:
- what is a musketoon
musket
English
Alternative forms
- musquet
Etymology
First attested around 1210 as a surname, and later in the 1400s as a word for the sparrowhawk (Middle English forms: musket, muskett, muskete (“sparrow hawk”)), from Middle French mousquet, from Old Italian moschetto (a diminutive of mosca (“fly”), from Latin musca) used to refer initially to a sparrowhawk (given its small size or speckled appearance) and then a crossbow arrow and later a musket, adhering to a pattern of naming firearms and cannons after birds of prey and similar creatures (compare falcon, falconet), a sense which was also borrowed into French and then (around 1580) into English. Cognate to Spanish mosquete, Portuguese mosquete. Smoothbore firearms continued to be called muskets even as they switched from using matchlocks to flintlocks to percussion locks, but with the advent of rifled muskets, the word was finally displaced by rifle.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?m?sk?t/, /?m?sk?t/
Noun
musket (plural muskets)
- A kind of firearm formerly carried by the infantry of an army, originally fired by means of a match, or matchlock, for which several mechanical appliances (including the flintlock, and finally the percussion lock) were successively substituted; ultimately superseded by the rifle.
- Soldier, soldier, won't you marry me, with your musket, fife and drum.
- Sam, Sam, pick up thy musket.
- (falconry) A male Eurasian sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus).
Derived terms
- musketeer
Related terms
- musketoon
Translations
See also
- musket on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
References
Danish
Etymology
From French mousquet (“musket”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /musk?t/, [mu?s???d?]
Noun
musket c (singular definite musketten, plural indefinite musketter)
- musket
- (dialectal) A firearm in general.
Inflection
Further reading
- musket on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /m?s?k?t/
- Hyphenation: mus?ket
- Rhymes: -?t
Etymology 1
From Middle Dutch musket.
Noun
musket n (plural musketten, diminutive musketje n)
- musket
- Obsolete spelling of mosket
Derived terms
- musketkogel
- musketloop
Etymology 2
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
musket n (uncountable)
- hundreds and thousands, nonpareils, tiny sprinkles
Derived terms
- musketflik
- musketzaad
Middle English
Alternative forms
- muskett, muskete, muskytte, moskett, muscet, muskyte
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Northern French mousket, borrowed itself from Italian moschetto.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?musk?t/, /?muskit/
Noun
musket (plural musketes)
- A sparrowhawk or musket.
Descendants
- English: musket
References
- “musket(e, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-10-03.
musket From the web:
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