cold weapon

English

WOTD – 21 January 2023

Etymology

A man with a Japanese longsword called a katana (top), and a Karo tribe member from Ethiopia hunting guinea fowl with a bow and arrow (bottom). These are types of cold weapons.

From cold + weapon, possibly a calque of Russian холо́дное ору́жие (xolódnoje orúžije, cold weapon), from холо́дное (xolódnoje) (the nominative neuter form of холо́дный (xolódnyj, cold)) + ору́жие (orúžije, arm, weapon; weaponry): see the 1876 quotation.[1]

Pronunciation

Noun

cold weapon (plural cold weapons)

  1. (weaponry) A weapon that does not use explosives or fire.
    Synonym: white arm
    Antonym: firearm
    Hyponym: edged weapon
    • 1863 January 17, “How to Make Soldiers”, in Charles Dickens, editor, All the Year Round. A Weekly Journal. [...] With which is Incorporated Household Words, volume VIII, number 195, London: [] C. Whiting, [], →OCLC, page 446, column 1:
      A fencing-room in which twenty or thirty couples of men are practising, is a fair illustration of a mélée with cold weapons.
    • 1876, Hugo Stumm, “The Field of Operations and the Russian Resources of Operations in General”, in F. Henvey, P. Mosa, transl., The Russian Campaign against Khiva in 1873. [], part I, Calcutta, West Bengal: Foreign Department Press, →OCLC, section II (The Russian Bases of Operations in Central Asia), page 157:
      The most effective weapons in the hands of the Caucasians was the sword, or as the Russians call it "the cold weapon" ["khalodnoye orúdiye," as opposed to firearms "agniovoye orúdiye"], the use of which, in hand-to-hand fight, was their special forte.
    • 1890, Theodore Ayrault Dodge, “Army Organization and Tactics. Early Seventeenth to Early Eighteenth Century.”, in Gustavus Adolphus: A History of the Art of War from Its Revival after the Middle Ages to the End of the Spanish Succession War, [] (Great Captains), volume II, Boston, Mass., New York, N.Y.: Houghton, Mifflin and Company [], →OCLC, page 571:
      Pistols, carbines and musketoons were the firearms of the cavalry; a sword or sabre the cold weapon.
    • 2009, Zhang Yun, “The History and Features of Dao”, in The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, Berkeley, Calif.: Blue Snake Books, North Atlantic Books, →ISBN, page 27:
      There are perhaps more variations of the dao than there are of any other cold weapon.

Translations

References

  1. P. O. (2016 August 28) “What is the Origin of ‘Cold Weapon’ in the Sense of Non-firearm?”, in English Language & Usage Stack Exchange, archived from the original on 18 January 2022.

Further reading

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