Online Encyclopedia
Make a correction
Your email address will not appear on the site. Note, comments may take some time to be approved.
Back to article:
GRENADE (from the French word for a pomegranate, from a resemblance in shape to that fruit)
Your email:
Article name:
Article content:
GRENADE (from the French word for a pomegranate, from a resemblance in shape to that fruit), a small spherical explosive vessel thrown by hand. Hand-grenades were used in war in the 26th century, but the word " grenade " was also from the S102. Al203. Fe203. FeO. CaO. MgO. K20. Na2O. Fl. B203. Granite 70.17 15.07 •88 1.79 1.13 1.11 5.73 2.69 •15 tr. Greisen 69.42 15.65 1.25 3'30 •63 1.02 4.06 •27 3'36 .59 first used to imply an explosive shell fired from a gun; this survives to the present day in the German Granate. These weapons were employed after about 166o, by special troops called " grenadiers " (q.v.), and in the wars of the 17th and 18th centuries they are continually met with. They became obsolete in the 19th century, but were given a new lease of life in the 20th, owing to their employment in the siege of Port Arthur in 1904, where hand-grenades of a modern type, and containing powerful modern explosives, proved very effective (see AMMUNITION,Shell). Hand-grenades filled with chemicals and made of glass are used as a method of fire-extinction, and similar vessels containing a liquid with a very strong smell are used to discover defects in a drain or sewer.