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Usage of a '''firearm as a blunt weapon''' is encountered in various situations. Examples include '''butt-stroking''' (sriking with the butt of a rifle)<ref>, '']''</ref> and '''pistol-whipping''' (beating someone with pistol)<ref>, ''Random House Unabridged Dictionary''</ref>. | Usage of a '''firearm as a ]''' is encountered in various situations. Examples include '''butt-stroking''' (sriking with the butt of a rifle)<ref>, '']''</ref> and '''pistol-whipping''' (beating someone with pistol)<ref>, ''Random House Unabridged Dictionary''</ref>. | ||
==Pistol whipping== | ==Pistol whipping== |
Revision as of 06:53, 5 January 2009
Usage of a firearm as a blunt weapon is encountered in various situations. Examples include butt-stroking (sriking with the butt of a rifle) and pistol-whipping (beating someone with pistol).
Pistol whipping
"Pistol-whipping" and "to pistol-whip" were reported as "new words" of American speech in 1955, with cited usages form 1940s.
Pistol whipping may leave unusual lacerations on the body of the injured due to various protruding details fo the pistol.
References
- "Butt Stroke", Random House Unabridged Dictionary
- "Pistol whipping", Random House Unabridged Dictionary
- "Fifty Years Among the New Words: by John Algeo, p. 142, from vol. 30 (1955), no. 4 of the American Speech, the journal of the American Dialect Society
- "Pistol whipping", in Forensic Pathology, by David Dolinak, Evan W. Matshes, Emma O. Lew, 2006, ISBN 0122199510, p. 185