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Springfield rifle
noun
- a single-shot, breechloading .45-caliber rifle used by the U.S. Army from 1867 to 1893.
- Also called Springfield 1903. a bolt-operated, magazine-fed, .30-caliber rifle adopted by the U.S. Army in 1903 and used during World War I.
- a single-shot, muzzleloading rifle of .58-inch caliber, used by the Union Army during the Civil War.
Springfield rifle
noun
- a magazine-fed bolt-action breech-loading .30 calibre rifle formerly used by the US Army
Word History and Origins
Origin of Springfield rifle1
Word History and Origins
Origin of Springfield rifle1
Example Sentences
He gave me a bolt-action Springfield rifle when I was 7.
The modified Springfield rifle that was buried alongside lawman and gunfighter Wild Bill Hickock in South Dakota in August 1876 is expected to fetch up to $200,000.
He added, “It’s what you stoop to when the indefensibility of your case requires that you attack a man who is wearing a Springfield rifle on a field of blue above a Purple Heart.”
He was carrying his full combat kit, plus six rounds of 81-mm mortar ammunition, wrapped in a life preserver so he could float it ashore, and an old 1903 Springfield rifle.
He promoted the 1903 Springfield rifle for his troops.
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