the M1 Garand (pronounced grand) was used by most countrys involved in ww2 and the Thompson was used by i think even more countrys.
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That may be the "most famous" to military historians but the keeping to weapons not vehicles, among those that really mean anything to most people were the German V1 and V2, Japan's Kamikaze planes, the British "Dambuster" bombs and the two atomic bombs dropped by America on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The V1 was called the "flying bomb" or "doodlebug" - the latter referring to its distinctive exhaust noise - and was effectively a crude unmanned aircraft packed with explosives and designed to fly as far as London, its target. Once nearly over London its engine would cut out and it would drop onto the city.
The V2 was a ballistic missile (with conventional chemical-explosive warhead), i.e. one designed to fly under power to its zenith then fall parabolically to its target. The V2s were all aimed at London. (Towards the end of the War the Nazis were building a V3 weapon in NE France: a battery of 90-mile range 6"-calibre guns intended to maintain a steady fall of shells onto London. The battery was discovered though not fully identified, its construction slowed by bombing, then captured after the Normandy Landings.)
The Kamikaze were suicide-pilots, deliberately flying fighter-planes loaded with explosives at their targets. They were used particularly against the American Navy in the Pacific.
The Dambuster bombs were very heavy, spherical weapons that were spun up to high speeds of rotation in mountings on modified Lancaster bombers. The spinning ensured that once the bomb had been dropped from a carefully-set height above the reservoir it would skim along the surface then keep itself against the dam wall as it struck that and sank. This was so it would detonate right against the concrete deep under the water.
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world" is one of his most famous quotes.
It should be the bayonet
The most famous anti-submarine weapon was the depth charge. This weapon was only invented in 1916 and so between 1914 and 1916, submarines on both sides had relative freedom to move about freely. After 1916, this was not the case. The world war 1 started in 1914 and ended in 1918.
The weapon of choice for the Crusaders was the broadsword.
The Lusitania.
The one, main weapon was man. All of them could pull the trigger or push the button. After man was the rifle. Everyone had one and individually these were the most deadly weapon overall.
a nuke
The rifles most commonly used by the major combatants were, among the Allies, the Lee-Enfield
Guns
The most common method was with artillery.It is NOT a biological weapon, it is a chemical weapon.
No, wine was never used as a weapon during World War 2. If you watched the most recent episode of "Penn and Teller Tell a Lie" on Discovery Channel, then you would know that it was a BIG FAT LIE.
A paper clip is not the deadliest weapon in the world. In fact, the weapon that can do the most damaged when used by man is a flamethrower.