caliber

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. Diameter of the bore of a firearm, typically measured between opposite lands.
  2. The diameter of round or cylindrical body, as of a bullet, a projectile, or a column.
  3. A nominal name for a cartridge type, which may not exactly indicate its true size and may include other measurements such as cartridge length or black powder capacity. Eg 7.62×39 or 38.40.
  4. Unit of measure used to express the length of the bore of a weapon. The number of calibres is determined by dividing the length of the bore of the weapon, from the breech face of the tube to the muzzle, by the diameter of its bore. A gun tube the bore of which is 40 feet (480 inches) long and 12 inches in diameter is said to be 40 calibers long.
  5. Relative size, importance, magnitude.
  6. Capacity or compass of mind.
  7. Degree of importance or station in society.
  8. Movement of a timepiece.

Pronunciation

/ˈkæl.ɪ.bə(ɹ)/ /ˈkæl.ə.bɚ/ /ˈkæl.ɪ.bɚ/ /ˈkæl.ə.bə(ɹ)/ EN-AU ck1 calibre.ogg

Word forms

caliber calibers calibre

Etymology

From French calibre (“bore of a gun, size, capacity (literally, and figuratively), also weight”), from Italian calibro.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.