This is from m-w.com.

The firs words are the important point of the definition, the point that
pertains to your earlier statement.

"a crude bomb made of a bottle filled with a flammable liquid "

The wick being optional.  The bomb part is not.  What happens to a liquid,
initially inside a container, when the container is violently broken?

Isaac, this is a losing battle for you bro.  Need I break out the Army's
improvised munitions manual?


--
Timothy Heald
Analyst, Architect, Developer
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
W: 202-228-8372
C: 703-300-3911
-----Original Message-----
From: S. Isaac Dealey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 6:24 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: Hasidic riot in Brooklyn

The meanings of words change and are frequently if not usually based on
opinions. Words are subjective things. Language is subjective.
Hence the reason why any given dictionary is liable to have upwards of
15 definitions for a single word. If language were objective, then a given
word would have only one definition. Even the definition you've given here
exhibits "fuzziness" as evidenced at a cursory glance by use of the word
"usually". It's a slang term. There weren't R&D teams assigned to top-secret
government projects to produce this weapon, nobody commissioned their team
of engineers to name the thing, nobody printed official military
documentation explaining how the weapon was named after Molotov because the
guy was a real prick. Somebody made one, it caught on. They had to call it
something, that's what they called it. It's no more objective than "peeps"
or "sneakers". If it were called an SR-71 Molotov and had official military
regulations for their construction, then I would agree with you.

> This isn't based on opinion, it is based on factual
> information.   It is an
> objective, not subjective statement.  Words have meanings.

> Molotov cocktail
> One entry found for Molotov cocktail.
> Main Entry: Mo·lo·tov cocktail
> Pronunciation: 'mä-l&-"tof-, 'mo-, 'mO-, -"tov-
> Function: noun
> Etymology: Vyacheslav M. Molotov
> : a crude bomb made of a bottle filled with a flammable liquid (as 
> gasoline) and usually fitted with a wick (as a saturated rag) that is 
> ignited just before the bottle is hurled

> --
> Timothy Heald
> Analyst, Architect, Developer
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> W: 202-228-8372
> C: 703-300-3911
> -----Original Message-----
> From: S. Isaac Dealey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 5:26 PM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: RE: Hasidic riot in Brooklyn

> It's a slang term, and I'm using the information that's available to 
> me...

> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov_cocktail

> In any event, the intent (if not end result) was to destroy the 
> cruiser by fire. So... I can't say that I honestly feel that a person 
> would not have used a more explosive method of accomplishing that end, 
> given the same circumstance and having a different weapon available.
> So no, it's not much different imo.

>> A Molotov cocktail is an improvised explosive device.
>> I know, having been in a humvee hit by one before.

>> When the bottle breaks the fuel, and often some additives like 
>> powdered soap to make it stick, explosively spreads and almost 
>> instantly catches fire.

>> Tanks were taken down with cocktails during the second world war, and 
>> during various soviet occupations in eastern Europe.


s. isaac dealey     434.293.6201
new epoch : isn't it time for a change?

add features without fixtures with
the onTap open source framework

http://www.fusiontap.com
http://coldfusion.sys-con.com/author/4806Dealey.htm




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