32 ACP
In most circumstances, no. The bullet is too large to chamber in the handgun.
Its the size of the bullet that the gun is made for. its the caliber that a handgun uses
Assuming you mean a bullet fired from a .22 caliber handgun, the answer is, yes, it can, but it depends on several variables.
A bullet from a handgun can travel, on average, about a mile.
Possible.
NO!! Although the bullet diameter is the same, the case length is different and should not chamber in the 380 caliber handgun.
It depends on several factors, but a good rule of thumb is "about a mile."
Size and relative power. A .40 caliber bullet is .40 of an inch and the entire cartridge is 28.8 millimeters long. A .50 caliber (handgun) bullet is .50 of an inch and the entire cartridge is 40.99 millimeters long. The .50 caliber has more powder, more velocity, and more muzzle energy.
If you mean "farther" yes, generally speaking, a .22 will travel further than a .45. The .45 is a much heavier bullet and loses velocity at a faster rate.
It's a .30 caliber bullet.
A 22 caliber bullet is 22/100 inches in diameter. A 7.62 mm bullet is 30 caliber or 30/100 inches in diameter there is no such thing as a 7.62 caliber bullet
caliber 38 is a caliber 38. bullet dia. is .357 caliber deals with the dia. or measurement around the bullet head, not the bullet case.