A magazine and a clip can be two completely different things construed in a variety of manners.
A magazine can refer to a powered magazine, as are in ships, a bullet magazine, as are in weapons, or a reading magazine, as are found in the check out isles of stores.
A clip can refer to a clip of ammunition, a paper clip, a clip of a film, or various other things.
Lets face it. English doesn't make sense. Deal with it.
Oh my god, the same word can mean different things
depending on the context? And, as we all know, English is the only language that does this...
A "clip" is slang for a "magazine",
No, "clip" is "incorrect" for "magazine". It's like saying "gasoline" is slang for "diesel".
just as the lever action rifle is another name for the winchester, the "hand cannon" is slang for the desert eagle,
Both of those are the names that
have to be used because of copyright issues.
the bullpup is a description of a rifle with the magazine loading behind the pistol grip, and so on and so forth.
Yes, but that is an actual description and the correct usage of the term, unlike saying "clip". The difference between clips and magazines is the difference between night and day.
Their time could be spent better elsewhere, imo.
It's just changing a simple string. Hell, just CTRL+F "clip" and change it to "mag".
I believe in the marines. Soldiers often refer to magazines as clips as in "pass me another clip" Now if im not mistaken marines are PROFESSIONAL soldiers.
Wiki definition of a clip
You know what "M.A.R.I.N.E." stands for?
Anyway, I wouldn't take a couple marine's words for it; they're wrong, no matter how you slice it, regardless of how "professional" they may be.
Most of the soldiers I've talked to/shot with refer to them, correctly, as "mags". The ones that don't, well, they have some strange ideas about how guns function to begin with (and are usually REMFs).