No, typically a full stop is not used at the end of a bullet point unless the bullet point is a complete sentence. If each bullet point is a complete sentence, then it's appropriate to use a full stop at the end.
No, magnets cannot stop a bullet. Magnets do not have the ability to deflect or stop a bullet in its path.
No, electricity cannot stop a bullet.
It's always worth a try! But no. The bullet would smash through your teeth and instantly kill you. There is a magician's trick where they get a blank fired at them and they quickly position the bullet between their teeth, creating the illusion they actually caught it.
No
He tied a rope around his leg to stop the wound from bleeding.
At least ten feet thick. This would depend on the weapon used to fire the bullet - an airgun pellet wouldn't require much of a wall, whilst an armour-piercing round from a high-velocity rifle would require a very thick one.
you have to shoot it with a gold bullet.
i have no idea my self
Noop. Even if you had a bullet that was attracted to a magnet (like an iron bullet), it would have too much kinetic energy to be effected. I guess if you had a really big and thick magnet, it could stop a bullet, just like a book can sometimes stop a bullet. This has nothing to do with magnetism, but just the interaction of mass.
This depends on the particular caliber, weight, velocity, and construction of the bullet and the "Threat Level" of the body armor. No vest is bullet proof -- the preferred term is body armor.Generally speaking hollow points are much lesslikely to penetrate body armor which will stop non-hollowpoints bullets of the same caliber, weight, and velocity.
Yes, an austentite steel bar would stop both a bullet and a knife.