Bullets do not usually have numbers on them- but cartridges do. A number 35 by itself on a cartridge case head would usually indicate a military cartridge, and the date of manufacture- 1935. Additional markings, such as 35 REM, would indicate the caliber- .35 Remington, a good hunting cartridge for deer and bear.
I think you mean .32 caliber, not mm. It means that the gun fires a bullet that is about 32/100ths of an inch in diameter. A 9mm fires a bullet 9mm in diameter- or about .35 inches in diameter. A 32 mm bullet would be about the size of big (D cell) flashlight battery!
Roughly .35--.36 caliber.
35 feet =D
The reference to grains means the weight of the bullet.
If you mean Video Copilot's 'The Bullet', then no, it is sold separately.
No way to answer. Find a good gunsmith and have him examine it.
35-45 bullet
Grain refers to the weight of the bullet when measured on a powder scale.
Slug could be a snail like animal. It could also mean one heavy bullet.
Grain refers to the weight of the bullet when measured on a powder scale.
You have asked a question that can't be answered. There is no such thing as an "average" bullet. Define what you mean by "average bullet" and maybe someone can help you.
The mean of 35 and 45 is 40.