yes
I could not locate an definitive answer for you on this matter. I doubt they used grenades. They actually used the tin cans from their 'bully beef' meals, and filled them with shrapnel, gunpowder and a long fuse. They would throw them to enemy trenches as the fuse almost hit the gunpowder and the shrapnel biits would explode out. This clearly shows their resourcefulness.
Not really. The current hand grenade had not been invented. There WERE "grenades" of a sort- large metal balls filled with gunpowder, with a burning fuse- but they were rarely used.
Gunpowder, also called black powder is a mixture of sulfur, charcoal, and potassium nitrate. Interestingly, all three ingredients in gunpowder can be bought at your local garden center. Gunpowder was first produced by the Chinese around about the year 1040. It is used in multiple explosives, like some grenades.
Depends on the women. Women SOLDIERS that have been trained know how to use grenades.
I'm not sure. They made gunpowder for like grenades and bullets. That may have something to with it.
Ancient Romans did not use gunpowder. Gunpowder was invented by China around the middle ages.
They used gunpowder for fireworks and weapons.
Who?
7
Gunpowder was invented by the Ancient Chinese. Gunpowder came to Europe in the 1260s.
There is no specific collective noun for gunpowder, in which case, you use an appropriate noun suited to the situation a pound of gunpowder, a flask of gunpowder, a box of gunpowder, etc.
because of the GUNPOWDER and GUNPOWDER is in fireworks