Bullet was one of the main centrepoints of the JANet online community before the Internet reached the UK.
The original system ran under OS4000 on Euclid - the central server at UCL, but was later ported to unix. Several other Bullet-based boards sprung up, the most notable of which was probably Olajier, a publicly-accessible Bullet which ran at the Imperial College Electrical Engineering department.
One publically-accessible Bullet system still exists. Telnet or ssh to euclid.earth.ox.ac.uk and login as guest with no password.
As of version 3.2, the Unicode standard has 13 semantically distinct varients of the bullet. They are enumerated below, separated by code block.
The columns below should be interpreted as :
General Punctuation
Mathematical Operators
Geometric Shapes
Miscellaneous Symbols
Dingbats
Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-B
Slang: One year in prison.
Frequent viewers of cop shows like NYPD Blue or Law & Order will no doubt have heard this term used in context. For instance, Detective Lennie Briscoe might say after eliminating a potential suspect: "It can't be him, he's doing a bullet at Rikers."
Sources are silent on the origin of the term, since it isn't obvious how a year might be likened to a "bullet." Especially when you consider that a real bullet can earn its owner a great deal more than a year in prison, depending on what it hits.
Sources: www.convictsandcops.com, dictionary.prisonwall.org.
More properly called a jacketed truncated cone bullet, it is shaped like a truncated cone. Duh.
Although most pistol rounds can be loaded with a TC bullet it is most commonly found on .40 Smith & Wesson FMJ factory loads. The flat point (oxymoron?) creates a bigger permanent crush cavity and permanently damages more soft tissue than a round "ball" profile FMJ. .22 lr rounds also uses TC bullets, the Remington Viper for one.
Not to make fun of getting shot but just to compare, a hit from a TC bullet will sound like "THUBB!" while a ball will easily part soft tissue and go through and through and would be more appropriately onomatopeaiaized as "BLOOP!"
Bul"let (?), n. [F. boulet, dim. of boule ball. See Bull an edict, and cf. Boulet.]
1.
A small ball.
2.
A missile, usually of lead, and round or elongated in form, to be discharged from a rifle, musket, pistol, or other small firearm.
3.
A cannon ball.
A ship before Greenwich . . . shot off her ordnance, one piece being charged with a bullet of stone. Stow.
4.
The fetlock of a horse.
© Webster 1913.
printable version chaos
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