shooting

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
shooting
    n 1: the act of firing a projectile; "his shooting was slow but
         accurate" [syn: {shooting}, {shot}]
    2: killing someone by gunfire; "when the shooting stopped there
       were three dead bodies"
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Shoot \Shoot\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Shot}; p. pr. & vb. n.
   {Shooting}. The old participle {Shotten} is obsolete. See
   {Shotten}.] [OE. shotien, schotien, AS. scotian, v. i.,
   sce['o]tan; akin to D. schieten, G. schie?en, OHG. sciozan,
   Icel. skj?ta, Sw. skjuta, Dan. skyde; cf. Skr. skund to jump.
   [root]159. Cf. {Scot} a contribution, {Scout} to reject,
   {Scud}, {Scuttle}, v. i., {Shot}, {Sheet}, {Shut}, {Shuttle},
   {Skittish}, {Skittles}.]
   1. To let fly, or cause to be driven, with force, as an arrow
      or a bullet; -- followed by a word denoting the missile,
      as an object.
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            If you please
            To shoot an arrow that self way.      --Shak.
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   2. To discharge, causing a missile to be driven forth; --
      followed by a word denoting the weapon or instrument, as
      an object; -- often with off; as, to shoot a gun.
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            The two ends od a bow, shot off, fly from one
            another.                              --Boyle.
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   3. To strike with anything shot; to hit with a missile;
      often, to kill or wound with a firearm; -- followed by a
      word denoting the person or thing hit, as an object.
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            When Roger shot the hawk hovering over his master's
            dove house.                           --A. Tucker.
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   4. To send out or forth, especially with a rapid or sudden
      motion; to cast with the hand; to hurl; to discharge; to
      emit.
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            An honest weaver as ever shot shuttle. --Beau. & Fl.
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            A pit into which the dead carts had nightly shot
            corpses by scores.                    --Macaulay.
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   5. To push or thrust forward; to project; to protrude; --
      often with out; as, a plant shoots out a bud.
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            They shoot out the lip, they shake the head. --Ps.
                                                  xxii. 7.
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            Beware the secret snake that shoots a sting.
                                                  --Dryden.
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   6. (Carp.) To plane straight; to fit by planing.
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            Two pieces of wood that are shot, that is, planed or
            else pared with a paring chisel.      --Moxon.
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   7. To pass rapidly through, over, or under; as, to shoot a
      rapid or a bridge; to shoot a sand bar.
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            She . . . shoots the Stygian sound.   --Dryden.
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   8. To variegate as if by sprinkling or intermingling; to
      color in spots or patches.
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            The tangled water courses slept,
            Shot over with purple, and green, and yellow.
                                                  --Tennyson.
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   {To be shot of}, to be discharged, cleared, or rid of.
      [Colloq.] "Are you not glad to be shot of him?" --Sir W.
                                                  Scott.
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from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Shooting \Shoot"ing\, n.
   1. The act of one who, or that which, shoots; as, the
      shooting of an archery club; the shooting of rays of
      light.
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   2. A wounding or killing with a firearm; specifically
      (Sporting), the killing of game; as, a week of shooting.
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   3. A sensation of darting pain; as, a shooting in one's head.
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from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Shooting \Shoot"ing\, a.
   Of or pertaining to shooting; for shooting; darting.
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   {Shooting board} (Joinery), a fixture used in planing or
      shooting the edge of a board, by means of which the plane
      is guided and the board held true.

   {Shooting box}, a small house in the country for use in the
      shooting season. --Prof. Wilson.

   {Shooting gallery}, a range, usually covered, with targets
      for practice with firearms.

   {Shooting iron}, a firearm. [Slang, U.S.]

   {Shooting star}.
   (a) (Astron.) A starlike, luminous meteor, that, appearing
       suddenly, darts quickly across some portion of the sky,
       and then as suddenly disappears, leaving sometimes, for a
       few seconds, a luminous train, -- called also {falling
       star}.

   Note: Shooting stars are small cosmical bodies which
         encounter the earth in its annual revolution, and which
         become visible by coming with planetary velocity into
         the upper regions of the atmosphere. At certain
         periods, as on the 13th of November and 10th of August,
         they appear for a few hours in great numbers,
         apparently diverging from some point in the heavens,
         such displays being known as meteoric showers, or star
         showers. These bodies, before encountering the earth,
         were moving in orbits closely allied to the orbits of
         comets. See {Leonids}, {Perseids}.
   (b) (Bot.) The American cowslip ({Dodecatheon Meadia}). See
       under {Cowslip}.

   {Shooting stick} (Print.), a tapering piece of wood or iron,
      used by printers to drive up the quoins in the chase.
      --Hansard.
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from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
189 Moby Thesaurus words for "shooting":
      acute, acute pain, afflictive, agonizing, antiaircraft fire,
      archery, atrocious, bane, beheading, bite, biting, blood,
      bloodletting, bloodshed, boring pain, braining, burning,
      capital punishment, casting, charley horse, chase, chevy, chivy,
      chucking, coursing, cramp, cramping, cramps, crick, cross fire,
      crucifixion, cruel, curtain fire, cynegetics, darting pain,
      dealing death, decapitation, decollation, defenestration,
      destruction, destruction of life, direct fire, dispatch,
      distressing, dry fire, electrocution, euthanasia, excruciating,
      execution, extermination, falconry, file fire, fire,
      fire of demolition, firepower, fireworks, firing, flack, flak,
      flinging, flow of blood, fox hunting, fulgurant pain, fusillade,
      garrote, gassing, girdle pain, gnawing, gore, grave, griping,
      ground fire, gunfight, gunfire, gunnery, gunning, gunplay, hanging,
      hard, harrowing, harsh, hawking, heaving, hemlock, high-angle fire,
      hitch, horizontal fire, hunt, hunting, hurling, hurtful, hurting,
      immolation, interdiction fire, jaculation, judicial murder,
      jumping pain, kill, killing, kink, knifelike, lancinating pain,
      lapidation, lobbing, machine-gun fire, martyrdom, martyrization,
      mercy killing, mortar fire, musketry, necktie party, nip, painful,
      pang, paroxysm, paroxysmal, percussion fire, piercing, pinch,
      pistol fire, pitching, poignant, poisoning, prick, projection,
      pungent, racking, raking fire, rapid fire, ricochet fire,
      rifle fire, ritual killing, ritual murder, sacrifice, seizure,
      severe, sharp, sharp pain, shellfire, shikar, shoot, shoot-out,
      shooting pain, skeet, skeet shooting, slaughter, slaying, slinging,
      spasm, spasmatic, spasmic, spasmodic, sport, sporting, stab,
      stabbing, stabbing pain, stalking, still hunt, stinging, stitch,
      stoning, strangling, strangulation, taking of life, the ax,
      the block, the chair, the gallows, the gas chamber, the guillotine,
      the hot seat, the rope, thrill, throes, throwing, time fire,
      tormen, tormenting, torturous, trajection, trapshooting, tweak,
      twinge, twitch, venery, vertical fire, wrench, zone fire

    

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