yes.
No, because loaded is an adjective and weapon is noun.
The present participle "flourishing" can be used as an adjective (in the process of flourishing), for either of the main meanings (to grow, prosper, or to wave, display ostentatiously).The past participle "flourished" is only used as an adjective for the second meaning (e.g. a flourished ace, a flourished weapon).* The derivative adjective flourishable sees virtually no modern use.
Forged can be both a verb and an adjective. As a verb, it means to create something through skill and effort, like forging a signature or a weapon. As an adjective, it describes something that has been created or replicated fraudulently, like a forged document or artwork.
weapon+poison
'Bloody' as an adjective and adverb usually means 'covered or stained with blood, as from battle'. 'Bloody' may also be used as a verb as in 'to bloody someone's nose' most often from a blow or weapon. The term is also used especially in the United Kingdom as a swearword meaning 'damned' or 'confounded'.
A tank is a weapon. A tomahawk is a weapon.
poison+weapon poison is snake+weapon(or tools) weapon is tools and human
weapon
She does not need a weapon.
A weapon that can kill.
A weapon that is visible
The meaning of the word nuclear weapon, is a weapon that has a nuclear warhead on it.