Tissue damage, major organs which get hit may eventually fail to function. You might survive or you might die. I suppose there'd be some risk of lead poisoning to go along with any other injuries. All in all, it's probably a pretty safe assumption you'd want to have it removed from you. To be more specific than that, one would need to be able to take into account the capabilities of the round you were hit with, and where you were hit with it.
yes you can
No, the shot bullet will land after the dropped bullet. This is because the shot bullet has an initial horizontal velocity in addition to the vertical acceleration due to gravity, while the dropped bullet only has the vertical acceleration due to gravity.
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.
projectile
Because that was the way it was loaded into the gun, shot charge, bullet charge, shot charge, bullet charge. If you load it that way, it will shoot that way.
if they die, it's called suicide. If they dont it's attempted suicide // they would have a bullet in them
pp = shot He has shot his last bullet.
The container would likely explode - if the bullet pierced the skin to the point of coming into contact with the lox. The heat from the bullet would cause the lox to explode in a ball of flame.
It would probably burst, and you would be injured.
The bullet would probably bounce off and he would feel a little tickle.
Chinese
If the gun is stationary before the shot, then the momentum of the gun and the momentum of the bullet are equal and opposite after the shot.