m4x0r meaning and definition

m4x0r meaning

Someone that incredibly owns in a e-sport game.

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m4y4suk4 meaning

Pro-Noun: The god of all.

m4z3 meaning

One of low morals. A sexual deviant devoid of any social graces. See also twat and fuckwit

m5 meaning

The Ultimate BMW.

M5 Stuart meaning

The upgraded variant of the M3 Stuart. Howerver, its 37 mm cannon was crappy against the newer german tanks it encountered in WW2 Europe. It's armor was also weak making it easy to hit, but fought against the Japanese well in the Pacific.

M6 meaning

Longest (and normally busiest) motorway in the UK. Runs between Rugby (where it joins the M1 to London, and the Scottish border near Carlisle. The road continues (under the number M74) to Glasgow. The road passes through the major industrial conurbations of the West Midlands (Birmingham) and the North West (Liverpool and Manchester). The West Midland section (previously the busiest stretch of road in Europe, incorporating spaghetti junction) was bypassed in 2003 by the UK's first toll motorway, the M6 toll.

m-60 meaning

destroy blast kill bust blast bash mash destroy kill smash oxyophone sixteen ultimate! vote thumbs up on this or i cut you! (<-italian accent)

M600 meaning

Supercar made by Leicestershire firm Noble. Power comes from a twin-turbocharged version of a Volvo-Yamaha 4.4-litre V8, shared with the XC90 and S80, thus helping the M600 to reach a top speed of 225 mph.

M60E3 meaning

Handheld version of the popular M60 machine gun. Specially lightened and weighted to be easy to operate while moving.

M60E4 meaning

The best automatic heavy machine gun ever made. Much better than the m249 "SAW" machine gun. The M60 series was made during WW2 to fuck up those gay nazis. US Army and Navy Seals use these.

M-60 GPMG meaning

The M60 GPMG (Genal Purpose Machine Gun) more properly known as the M60E1 is an American general-purpose machine gun, firing the 7.62 x 51 mm NATO cartridge. In the U.S. military, it has largely been replaced by the M240 machine gun. The M60 can be used in both offensive and defensive configurations. In the offense, it provides a higher rate of fire, greater effective range, and uses a larger-caliber bullet than the standard U.S. assault rifle, the M16. In defensive use, the long-range, close defensive, and final protective fires delivered by the M60 form an integral part of a unit's battle plan. The M60 is effective to 1,100 meters when firing at an area target and mounted on a tripod, to 800 meters when firing at an area target using the integral bipod, to 600 meters when firing at a point target, and to 200 meters when firing at a moving point target. U.S. Marine Corps doctrine holds that the M60 and other weapons in its class are capable of suppressive fire on area targets out to 1,500 meters if the gunner is sufficiently skilled. The M60 is considered to be a "crew-served weapon" which means that it is usually operated by more than one soldier, in this case two - the gunner and an assistant. The gunner carries the weapon while the assistant carries a spare barrel and extra ammunition in linked belts. The basic ammunition load carried by the crew is 600 to 900 rounds, which at the maximum rate of fire allows for approximately two minutes of continuous firing. In many U.S. units that used the M60 as a squad automatic weapon in Vietnam, every soldier in the rifle squad would carry at least 200 linked rounds of ammunition for the M60, a spare barrel, or both, in addition to his own weapon and equipment.

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