In "The Catbird Seat," the term "are you hollering down the rain barrel" is a Southern colloquial expression meaning that somebody is talking nonsense or exaggerating. It implies that the person's statements are not to be taken seriously or are meaningless. In the story, Mr. Martin uses this phrase to dismiss Mrs. Barrows' outlandish claims.
The phrase "Are you hollering down the rain barrel" is an idiomatic expression that is not commonly used in modern language. However, it can be interpreted as a rhetorical question asking if someone is wasting their efforts or speaking into a void where their words will not be heard or have any effect, similar to shouting into an empty rain barrel where the sound is muffled and goes unheard.
It means that whoever is "sitting in the catbird seat" holds a position of power or prominence.
Being in a position of advantage or power.
To barrel means to move rapidly and recklessly, as if you rolled a barrel down a road. A tin can on wheels would be a description of an automobile.
There are 3 times that a pole would be in a cannon barrel:First to swab the cannon barrel of debris from previous firing,To ram down the cartridge,Finally to ram down the cannonball.
The phrase "scraping around the bottom of the pickle barrel" means going to extra effort to find something of the slightest value where there might not be anything and being unable to find anything. This question for example. One might say: With all the important aspects of the story "The Catbird Seat" being used up in about 40 previous questions, they must have really been scraping the bottom of the pickle barrel to find this one."
They used stars to show how the barrel is choked. 1 star is for full, 2 for modified, and so on down through the chokes.
Its an analogy to human behavior. One tries to get ahead, and the others will crawl over it, bringing it down.
Over a Barrel: helpless, at a disadvantage
Have only encountered the term used for muzzleloading firearms. The ramrod is used to ram- of push- the bullet down the barrel.
What do you mean by short barrel? They were all 24" barrels. The barrel is measured by putting a stick ( or whatever ) down the barrel from the muzzle until it hits the bolt, it is not the measurement from the muzzle to where it hits the receiver. True for all guns. That is the barrel length. The 241 is a "Takedown" Rifle, so you have about 3/4 of an inch beyond where the barrel meets the receiver that is threaded so you can assemble and disassemble the rifle.
What does J1727 on the barrel of my 270 mean?