shotgun
See also: shot-gun
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From shot + gun. Front passenger seat sense comes from ride shotgun.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
shotgun (countable and uncountable, plural shotguns)
- (firearms) A gun which fires loads typically consisting of small metal balls, called shot, from a cartridge.
- (slang) The front passenger seat in a vehicle, next to the driver; so called because the position of the shotgun-armed guard on a horse-drawn stage-coach, wagon train, or gold transport was next to the driver on a forward-mounted bench seat.
- I call shotgun! (I claim the right to sit in the passenger seat.)
- (US, especially Southern US) A one-story dwelling with no hallways or corridors, with the rooms arranged in a straight line.
- Elvis Presley was born in a two-bedroom shotgun in Tupelo, Mississippi.
- (American football) A play formation in which the quarterback is a few feet behind the snapper when the ball is hiked, ideally allowing for an easier pass play.
- (attributive, as a modifier) Relating to shotguns, either in a present or past sense: e.g. shotgun cartridges, shotgun seat.
- (attributive, as a modifier) Relating to the threat of force or dubious means: e.g. shotgun wedding, shotgun diplomacy.
- (attributive, as a modifier) Relating to the use of numerous, diverse or indiscriminate means to achieve a particular result: e.g. shotgun marketing, a shotgun approach.
Synonyms
- (gun which fires loads of small metal balls): scattergun
Derived terms
Translations
gun
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front seat next to driver
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Verb
shotgun (third-person singular simple present shotguns, present participle shotgunning, simple past and past participle shotgunned)
- (slang, smoking) To inhale from a pipe or other smoking device, followed shortly by an exhalation into someone else’s mouth.
- (transitive, informal) To verbally lay claim to (something)
- I got a day off because I shotgunned it.
- (transitive, baseball) To hit the ball directly back at the pitcher.
- (US, slang) To rapidly drink a beverage from a can by making a hole in the bottom of the can, placing the hole above one's mouth, and opening the top.
- (US, slang) To send out many (requests, answers to a question, etc), especially in the hope that one obtains a positive result (i.e. reveals useful information, is correct, etc), in the manner of a shotgun firing many balls of shot such that one may hit a target.
- 2009, Writing Fiction For Dummies ISBN 0470585234:
- An actual physical piece of paper shows that you're not just shotgunning out queries to every agent on the planet.
- 2013, Zack Arias, Photography Q&A: Real Questions, Real Answers, page 197:
- It's like they are on a generic mailing list and some photographer is just shotgunning cards out into the world with no thought as to who they are actually going to.
- 2009, Writing Fiction For Dummies ISBN 0470585234:
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