Yes, it's quite possible to survive from bullet wounds at any time including the 1920's, it all depends what injury the bullet causes, a flesh wound in the arm, leg, buttocks etc. is not usually fatal, if the bullet hits a vital organ such as the heart or brain, causes serious internal injuries or the wound becomes infected then you are in trouble.
A typical football helmet is not bullet proof but someone could create a bullet proof football helmet.
Yes, a bullet shot into the air can come down with enough force to cause serious injury or death. This is known as a "falling bullet" or "stray bullet" phenomenon, and it is important to never shoot a firearm into the air as the bullet can still retain lethal velocity when descending.
It depends. If the bullet hit your femoral artery you could very well bleed to death in minutes.
Yes. It has happened before.
Like if someone were to fall, but only get a little cut if they say "Oh my gosh I'm bleeding!" someone could say "Bite the bullet" meaning 'be tough about it' or 'take it like a man' kinda like 'get over it'.
The place where someone or something entered. Could be the border crossing where a person entered the country. Could be the place where a bullet entered a body.
Simple. They have a natural immunity or are in the right place at the right time.
Yes. You could fall into an elevator shaft. You could be run over by a car. You could get struck by lightning. Someone could stab you. And, if someone shoots you with a high-power round, you can die as well. They are not really bulletproof . . . they are actually bullet resistant.
No, they'd die pretty quick.
the radio was not invented in the 1920s, but it came out in the 1920s when people could buy them
no
Slug could be a snail like animal. It could also mean one heavy bullet.