Dictionary Definition
grenade n : a small explosive bomb thrown by hand
or fired from a missile
User Contributed Dictionary
see Grenade
English
Etymology
From French grenade, from Old French grenate in the phrase pome grenate ‘pomegranate’, ultimately from Latin pomum granatum ‘seeded fruit’. The -d developed in French under influence of Spanish granada.Noun
- A pomegranate.
- A small explosive device, designed to be thrown by hand or launched from a grenade launcher.
a pomegranate
- Dutch: granaatappel
- Hebrew: רִמּוֹן (rimon)
- Japanese: ざくろ
small explosive device
French
Etymology
Substantive use of Old French granate in pome granate ‘pomegranate’, from dialectal Italian pom granat, from Latin pomum granatum ‘seeded fruit’. The -d- developed under influence from Spanish granada.Pronunciation
- /ɡʀǝnad/
- /gR@.nad/
Noun
fr-noun fExtensive Definition
A hand grenade is a small hand-held anti-personnel
weapon designed to be thrown and then explode after a short time.
The word "grenade" is derived from the French "grenade" (meaning
pomegranate, the
fruit originally called in French "Pomme-grenade" or
"grenade-apple," in reference to the general size of early grenades
and because its shrapnel pellets reminded
soldiers of the seeds of this fruit). Grenadiers
were originally soldiers who specialized in
throwing grenades.
Not all grenades are thrown by hand. Several
types are fired from rifles or purpose-designed grenade
launchers. For example, tear gas
grenades used in riot control
are fired from riot guns, and
the M203
grenade launcher can be fitted to several types of assault
rifles.
History
The first grenade was partly invented in China during the Song Dynasty (960—1279 AD), known as Zhen Tian Lei when Chinese soldiers packed gunpowder into ceramic and/or metal containers. In 1044, a military book Wujing Zongyao ("Compilation of Military Classics") described various gunpowder recipes in which one can find the prototype of the modern hand grenade.At the same time the Greeks of the Byzantine
empire made hand grenades with Greek fire in
the 10th to 12th centuries.
The first cast iron
bomb-shells and grenades seen in China did not appear in Europe
until 1467. Within a couple centuries of this, the Chinese had
discovered the explosive potential of packing hollowed cannonball
shells with gunpowder. Written later by Jiao Yu in the
mid 14th century book of the Huolongjing
("Fire Drake Manual"), this manuscript recorded an earlier Song-era
cast iron cannon known as the 'flying-cloud thunderclap eruptor'
(fei yun pi-li pao). The manuscript stated that (Wade-Giles
spelling):
The shells (phao) are made of cast iron, as large
as a bowl and shaped like a ball. Inside they contain half a pound
of 'magic' gunpowder (shen huo). They are sent flying towards the
enemy camp from an eruptor (mu phao); and when they get there a
sound like a thunder-clap is heard, and flashes of light appear. If
ten of these shells are fired successfully into the enemy camp, the
whole place will be set ablaze...
This text of the Huolongjing was also important
for the understanding of the Chinese hand grenade in the 14th
century, as it provided much more detailed descriptions and even
printed illustrations of the grenade bombs used. In 1643 it is
possible that 'Grenados' were 'thrown amongst the Welsh' at
Holt
Bridge during the English Civil War.
The use of the word 'grenade' in the English
language apparently originated in the Glorious
Revolution (1688), where cricket ball-sized iron spheres packed
with gunpowder and fitted with slow-burning wicks were first used
against the Jacobites in the
battles of Killiecrankie
and Glen
Shiel.
These grenades were not very effective (probably
because a direct hit would be necessary for the grenade to have
effect) and, as a result, they saw little use.
However, trench
warfare favored the grenade. In a letter to his sister, Colonel
Hugh Robert Hibbert, described an improvised grenade employed
during the Crimea War
(1854-1856):
- ''We have a new invention to annoy our friends in their pits. It consists in filling empty soda water bottles full of powder, old twisted nails and any other sharp or cutting thing we can find at the time, sticking a bit of tow in for a fuse then lighting it and throwing it quickly into our neighbours pit where it bursts, to their great annoyance. You may imagine their rage at seeing a soda water bottle come tumbling into a hole full of men with a little fuse burning away as proud as a real shell exploding and burying itself into soft parts of the flesh.''
In World War I
(1914-1918) both sides only had small pre-war stocks of grenades.
As an interim measure, the troops often improvised their own, such
as the Jam Tin
Grenade. These were replaced when manufactured versions such as
the Mills
bomb, the first modern fragmentation grenade, became available
to British front-line troops. The Mills bomb was developed at the
Mills Munitions Factory in Birmingham,
England and was described as the first 'safe grenade'. 75,000,000
grenades were made during World War I. It was an explosive-filled
steel canister with a triggering pin and a distinctive deeply
notched surface. This segmentation was thought to aid fragmentation
and therefore increase the grenade's deadliness. Later research
showed that the segmentation did not improve fragmentation in any
way at all. Improved-fragmentation designs would later be made with
the notches on the inside, but at the time, this would have been
too expensive to produce. The external segmentation of the original
Mills bomb was retained, since it did provide a positive grip
surface. This basic "pin-and-pineapple" design is still used in
some modern grenades. On the other hand, the U.S. M67
fragmentation grenade has a smooth exterior. which is much more
suitable for being rolled into a room or being thrown in a flat arc
like a baseball.
To propel grenades farther, the rifle
grenade was devised. This made use of a modified rifle with a
blank cartridge to propel the grenade. These rifles would often be
permanently fixed in wooden support frames and would not be used
for firing bullets. Use was also made of catapults, both manufactured
and improvised, although these were eventually replaced in the
trenches by small mortars.
Parallel to the Mills bomb and its similar
counterparts, the Germans issued the Stielhandgranate,
or stick grenade, which featured an explosive charge encased in a
metal can and mounted on a wooden shaft for throwing. This simple
design continued to evolve throughout the First and Second World
Wars, with the Model 24
grenade (popularly known as the "potato masher") becoming one
of the most easily recognized of all small arms, and synonymous
with the German soldier.
The Molotov
cocktail is an improvised grenade prepared from a glass bottle
filled with alcohol
(ethanol) or gasoline (petrol) ignited by a
burning strip of cloth when the thrown bottle bursts against its
target. The Molotov cocktail received its name during the 1939
Winter
War, but had been in use earlier in the decade. The name
originated from Finnish troops during the Winter War. It was named
after former Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav
Molotov whom they deemed responsible for the war, and a
humorous
reference to the Soviet bombs known as "Molotov
bread baskets" in Finland.
Design
Grenades come in different sizes and shapes, for
different purposes. Most are designed to explode, projecting
shrapnel, i.e., sharp
pieces of the casing, serrated wire, or
an incendiary
material. Some, like smoke grenades, merely burn, releasing colored
smoke for masking, marking, or signaling. All grenades have two
things in common: first, they are hollow so they can be filled with
the explosive or
chemical filler; and second, they contain a hole into which a
fuse
can be screwed or inserted.
A grenade is essentially a small bomb, and works very much like a
simple firecracker.
A firecracker is made up of a paper body filled with flash powder
and fitted with a small fuse.
Once lit, the fuse burns down to the powder and blows the paper
body apart. In modern hand grenades, the fuse is lit by an internal
device rather than an external flame.
Characteristics
Hand grenades share the following four characteristics:- Their employment range is short;
- Their effective casualty radius is small;
- Their delay element permits safe throwing;
- Their hard shell, along with their previously mentioned delay element, enables the grenade to ricochet off hard surfaces, like walls, before detonating.
Hand grenades have the following main parts:
- The body contains the filler and, in some grenades, also provides the fragmentation;
- The filler is the chemical or explosive substance in the grenade, which determines the grenade's use and characteristics;
- The fuse assembly causes the grenade to function by igniting or detonating the filler.
Using grenades
A classic hand grenade has a safety handle or lever (sometimes called by the slang term, "spoon") and a removable safety pin that prevents the handle from being released. In transit, some grenade types also have a safety clip to further prevent the handle from coming off.To use a grenade the soldier grips it firmly with
his/her throwing hand, ensuring that the safety lever is firmly
held in place with the thumb. Left-handed soldiers are advised to
invert the grenade, ensuring that the thumb is still the digit
holding the safety lever in place. The pull ring of the safety pin
is then grasped with the index or middle finger of the non-throwing
hand and the safety pin is removed using a pulling and twisting
motion. The grenade is then thrown towards the target, an over-arm
throw is recommended but may not be suitable for an actual combat
situation. Soldiers are trained to throw grenades in standing,
prone-to-standing, kneeling, prone-to-kneeling, and alternate prone
positions and in under- or side-arm throws. If the grenade is
thrown from a standing position the thrower must then immediately
seek cover or lie prone if no cover is nearby.
Once the grenade is thrown the safety lever is
released and the striker throws the safety lever away from the
grenade body as it rotates to detonate the primer. The primer
explodes and ignites the fuse (sometimes called the delay element),
the fuse burns down and activates the detonator which explodes the
main charge.
When using an antipersonnel grenade, the
objective is to have the grenade explode so that the target is
within its effective radius. For the M67 fragmentation grenade used
by several NATO nations, the effective kill zone has a five meter
radius, while the casualty-inducing radius is approximately fifteen
meters. Fragments can fly as far as 230 meters.
"Cooking off" is a term referring to
intentionally holding onto an armed grenade after the pin has been
pulled and the handle released, to decrease the amount of time to
detonation after throwing. This technique is used to reduce the
ability of the enemy to take cover or throw the grenade back. It is
also used to allow the grenade to burst in the air over defensive
positions. This technique is inherently dangerous, since fuses may
vary from grenade to grenade. Because of this the U.S. Marines
(MCWP 3-35) describe cooking-off as the "least preferred
technique", recommending a "hard throw, skip/bounce technique" to
prevent an enemy returning a grenade.
A call is usually given upon deploying a grenade,
to warn friendly forces. Some yells, such as "grenade" or "fire in
the hole" are used when a grenade has been thrown in by an
enemy; in any instance the purpose is to give notice to fellow
soldiers to take cover.
In the U.S.
Military, when a grenade is dropped into an enclosed space like
a tunnel, room, or trench, the person dropping the grenade should
yell "fire in the hole" to warn that an explosion is about to
occur. Other U.S. military procedures include calling "frag out" to
indicate that a fragmentation grenade has been deployed.
Grenades are often used in the field to construct
booby
traps, using some action of the intended target (such as
opening a door, or starting a car) to trigger the grenade. These
grenade-based booby traps are simple to construct in the field
using readily available materials. The most basic technique
involves wedging a grenade in a tight spot so the safety lever does
not leave the grenade when the pin is pulled. A string is then tied
from the head assembly to another stationary object. When a soldier
steps on the string, the grenade is pulled out of the narrow
passageway, the safety lever is released, and the grenade
detonates.
Abandoned booby traps and discarded grenades
contribute to the problem of unexploded
ordnance. The use of trip wire-triggered grenades (along with
land
mines in general) is banned under the Ottawa
Treaty and may be treated as a war crime wherever it is
ratified.
The
People's Republic of China, the United
States, and Russia have not
signed the treaty despite international pressure, citing
self-defense needs. The United States is, however, a signatory of
the 1996 Protocol on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of
Mines, Booby-Traps and Other Devices. The 1996 Protocol restricts
use of mines to regions and situations where the mined areas are
known, clearly marked, and access is controlled so as to minimize
civilian casualties. In signing the 1996 Protocol, the United
States made a reservation that 'mines' as defined in the treaty
would not apply to booby trap-rigged hand grenades.
Grenades have also been made to release smoke, tear gas and
other gases, as well as illumination. Special
forces often use stun
grenades to disorient people during an entry into a room.
Some grenade designs were made to be thrown
longer distances. The German
"potato-masher" grenade had a long wooden handle that extended
its range by fifty percent. The "potato-masher" was fired by a
friction igniter in the head, which was activated by a pull string
threaded through the hollow handle. Immediately before throwing the
grenade, the soldier pulled a small plastic ring attached to a
string attached to the friction igniter. This started the time fuse
which fired the detonator after a delay. The "potato-masher" is
often incorrectly thought to have had an impact fuse. It did not,
but the superficially similar British stick grenade design of 1908
did.
Types of hand grenades
Fragmentation grenades
The fragmentation grenade (commonly known as a "frag") is an anti-personnel weapon that is designed to disperse shrapnel upon exploding. The body is made of hard plastic or steel. Flechettes, notched wire, ball bearings or the case itself provide the fragments. When the word "grenade" is used without specification, and context does not suggest otherwise, it is generally assumed to refer to a fragmentation grenade.These grenades were sometimes classed as
defensive grenades because the effective casualty radius of some
matched or exceeded the distance they could be thrown, thus
necessitating them being thrown from behind cover. The Mills bomb or
F1
grenade are examples of defensive grenades where the 30–45 m
casualty radius http://armor.kiev.ua/army/hist/f-1.shtml
matched or exceeded the 30 m that a grenade could reasonably be
thrown.
Modern fragmentation grenades such as the United
States M67 grenade
have a wounding radius of 15 m (half that of older style grenades
which may still be encountered) and can be thrown about 40 m.
Fragments may travel more than 200 m.http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/m67.htm
Concussion grenades
The concussion grenade is an anti-personnel device that is designed to damage its target with explosive power alone. Compared to fragmentation grenades, the explosive filler is usually of a greater weight and volume. The case is far thinner and is designed to fragment as little as possible. The overpressure produced by this grenade when used in enclosed areas is greater than that produced by the fragmentation grenade. Therefore, it is especially effective in enclosed areas.These grenades are usually classed as offensive
weapons because the effective casualty radius is smaller than the
distance it can be thrown.
The term 'concussion' is often erroneously
applied to stun grenades. This is not descriptive of the effects
caused by the grenade. The term 'concussion' is used because the
grenade relies on its explosive power to create casualties.
Percussion grenades
A percussion grenade detonates upon impact with
the target. Classic examples of percussion grenades are the
British
Gammon bomb and No. 69
grenade. Timed fuse grenades are generally preferred to
hand-thrown percussion grenades because their fuzing mechanisms are
safer and more robust than those used in percussion grenades. Some
percussion grenades have a conventional pyrotechnic fuse fitted as a
backup detonation device.
Smoke grenades
Smoke grenades are used as ground-to-ground or
ground-to-air signaling devices, target or landing zone marking
devices, and screening
devices for unit movement. The body is a sheet-steel cylinder with
emission holes in the top and bottom. These allow the smoke to be
released when the grenade is ignited. Two main types exist, colored
smoke (for signaling) and screening smoke. In colored smoke
grenades, the filler consists of 250 to 350 grams of colored
smoke mixture (mostly potassium
chlorate, lactose and a dye). Screening smoke grenades usually
contains HC (hexachloroethane/zinc)
smoke mixture or TA (terephthalic
acid) smoke mixture. HC smoke is harmful to breathe, since it
contains hydrochloric
acid. Whilst not intended as a primary effect, these grenades
can generate enough heat to scald or burn unprotected skin and the
spent casing should not be touched until it has cooled.
Riot control
Contrary to popular belief, gas-expelling
grenades are rarely used to disperse large groups, because of the
risk of causing generalized panic. Grenades are instead used to
create barriers of tear gas in order to direct the movement of
large groups of people, or to protect police officers on the verge
of being overwhelmed. As an exception, tear gas may be used to
disperse a mob surrounding a small centralized group.
Similarly, gas-expelling grenades are not often
used to force criminals out of cover because of the risk of
intoxicating people in enclosed areas, although SWAT teams will
occasionally employ CS gas grenades to
facilitate the arrest of an armed suspect, especially if there are
no bystanders in the area. This kind of deployment is most often
used in an area where several suspects have a large amount of
cover, since the functioning of other distraction grenades will be
hindered.
Tear gas grenades are similar to smoke grenades
in terms of shape and operation. In tear gas grenades the filler is
generally 80 to 120 grams
of CS gas
combined with a pyrotechnic composition
which burns to generate an aerosol of CS-laden smoke.
This causes extreme irritation to the eyes and, if inhaled, to the
nose and throat. (See also the
Branch Davidian siege). Occasionally CR gas is used
instead of CS.
Incendiary grenades
Incendiary grenades produce intense heat by means
of a chemical
reaction. The body is practically the same as that of a smoke
grenade. The filler is 600 to 800 grams of thermate, which is an improved
version of World War
II-era thermite.
The chemical reaction that produces the heat is called a "thermite
reaction". In this reaction, powdered aluminium metal and iron oxide
react to produce a stream of molten iron and aluminium oxide.
This reaction produces a tremendous amount of heat, burning at 2200
°C (4000
°F).
This makes incendiary grenades useful for destroying weapons
caches, artillery, and vehicles. Other advantages include its
ability to function without an external oxygen source, allowing it to
burn underwater. Because they are not intended to be thrown,
thermate incendiary grenades generally have a shorter delay
fuse
than other grenades e.g. two seconds.
White
phosphorus (also used in smoke grenades; see above) can also be
used as an incendiary agent. It burns at a temperature of 2800 °C
(5000 °F).
Thermite and white phosphorus cause some of the
worst and most painful burn
injuries because they burn so quickly and at such a high
temperature. In addition, white phosphorus is very poisonous: a
dose of 50-100 milligrams is lethal to the
average human.
A common improvised incendiary grenade is the
Molotov
Cocktail.
Stun grenades
Stun grenades, also called NFDDs (Noise and Flash
Diversionary Devices), "flash & bang" grenades, or flashbangs,
were originally designed for the British Special
Air Service as an incapacitant. Stun grenades
are used to confuse, disorient, or distract a potential threat. A
stun grenade can seriously degrade the combat effectiveness of
affected personnel for up to a minute. The best known example is
the M84 Stun Grenade, which produces a blinding (6-8 million
Candela)
flash and deafening (170-180 dB SPL) blast.
This grenade can be used to incapacitate people, generally without
causing serious injury.
Standing operating procedure for LAPD SWAT has officers
deploy flashbangs close to the point of entry. This is because all
attention will be directed towards the door once it has been
breached, and deploying the flashbang close to this point heightens
the chances that a suspect will be affected by the device.
The flash of light momentarily activates all
photosensitive cells in the retina, making vision impossible for
approximately five seconds until the eye restores the retina to its
original, unstimulated state. Subjects affected by flashbangs
describe seeing a single frame for the five seconds (as if their
vision was "paused") until it fades and normal sight returns. This
is because the sensory cells which have been activated continue
sending the same information to the brain until they are restored
to their resting state, and the brain translates this continuous
information into the same image. The incredibly loud blast emitted
by the grenade contributes to its incapacitative properties by
disturbing the fluid in the semicircular canals of the ear.
Upon detonation, the fuse/grenade
body assembly remains intact and produces no fragmentation.
The body is a steel
hexagonal tube with
holes along the sides which allow a blast of light and sound to be
emitted. This is done to prevent injury from shrapnel but it is
still possible to receive a burn, and injuries resulting from the
concussive properties of the detonation sometimes occur, the
intense heat created by the flashbang can also ignite flammable
materials such as fuel or certain fabrics. The fires that occurred
during the Iranian
Embassy Siege in London were caused by stun grenades. The
filler consists of about 4.5 grams of a pyrotechnic metal-oxidant
mix of magnesium and
ammonium
perchlorate or potassium
perchlorate.
Sting grenades
Sting grenades are based on the design of the fragmentation grenade. Instead of using a metal casing to produce shrapnel, they are made using two spheres of hard rubber. Inside the smaller sphere is the explosive charge, primer, and detonator. The space between the two spheres is then filled with many small, hard rubber balls. Upon detonation, the subject is incapacitated by the blunt force of the projectiles. The advantage to using sting grenades comes from the fact that the subject is very often incapacitated, winded, or at the very least dislodged from cover.Some types, such as the ALSG101CS from ALS
Technologies, have an additional payload of chemical agents like CS
gas.
The advantages compared to a flashbang are
- The "plug 'n shut" tactic, which is shutting one's eyes and plugging one's ears to avoid being affected by a flashbang. This does nothing to protect a person from a sting grenade.
- The subject does not need to be looking at the grenade for it to take its full effect.
- Sting grenades are much more likely to cause a subject to either fall or lower himself in pain, thus providing good sight lines to unaffected targets in the area.
This makes sting grenades ideal for containing
small groups of rowdy prisoners, providing a shooting opportunity
when a suspect is hiding behind cover, or in allowing SWAT teams to clear
small rooms.
A disadvantage of using sting grenades is that
they are not sure to incapacitate a subject, so it is dangerous to
use if the subject is armed. This arises from the fact that sting
grenades rely on the body's reaction to adverse stimuli (pain and
blunt force trauma) rather than denial of sensory input. A person
with sufficient mental focus can concentrate enough to ignore being
hit by a sting grenade's payload, whereas a stun grenade will
physically affect vision and sense of orientation. The effective
range of a sting grenade is limited compared to a stun grenade. In
addition, there is the risk of serious physical injury as the
target is being pelted with actual objects capable of inflicting
harm, and not just being deafened/blinded.
Impact stun grenades
A more recent development is the Blank Firing Grenade (BFIG or Blank Firing Impact Grenade). Preferred in many situations, especially training, for two main reasons; they are re-usable - and therefore more economical - because the charge is a standard ammunition blank, and they are subject to very few transport restrictions when unloaded. The BFIG contains a mechanism to fire a blank cartridge when dropped at any angle onto a hard surface from a height of a metre or more. Firing will occur in any combination of positions only on impact. http://www.hfmgroup.com/professionalsupplies/product-specs/impact-grenade.htmlAnti-tank grenades
The first anti-tank grenades were improvised devices usually made by putting a number of fragmentation grenades into a sandbag or by tying them together. Due to their weight, these were normally thrown from very close range or directly placed in vulnerable spots onto an enemy vehicle.Purpose-designed anti-tank grenades invariably
use the
shaped charge principle to penetrate the tank's armor. This
means that the grenade has to hit the vehicle at an exact right
angle for the effect to work properly. This is achieved by the
grenade deploying a small drogue
parachute or fabric streamers after being
thrown.
Britain put the first anti-tank grenade into the
field during the Second World War with the rifle-fired No 68 AT
Grenade. Also developed by the UK during the war, was the No 74
ST Grenade popularly known as a sticky bomb;
the main charge was held in a sphere covered in adhesive. In
anticipation of a German invasion, it was produced in substantial
numbers. Inherently dangerous for the user, it was relegated to
Home
Guard use.
During World War II, when tanks overran
entrenchments, anti-tank
mines could be and were used by infantry as an improvised hand
grenades by placing or throwing them in the path of a tank in the
hope of disabling a track.
The most widely-distributed anti-tank grenades
are the Russian designs of the 1950s and later, mainly the RKG-3.
Due to improvements in modern tank armor,
anti-tank hand grenades are generally considered obsolete. However
in recent conflict, namely the Iraq War, the
RKG-3 anti-tank hand grenade has made a reappearance in the service
of insurgents who utilize them primarily against
US Humvees, which lack the heavier armor of tanks.
Grenades as ornamentation
Stylized pictures of early grenades, with a flame coming out, are used as ornaments on military uniforms, particularly in France (esp. French Gendarmerie and the French Foreign Legion), and Italy (Carabinieri). Fusilier regiments in the British and Commonwealth tradition (e.g. the Princess Louise Fusiliers, Canadan Army) wear a "flaming grenade" cap-badge, reflecting their historic use of grenades in the assault. The British Grenadier Guards took their name and cap badge of a burning grenade from repelling an attack of French Grenadiers at Waterloo. The flag of the Russian Ground Forces also bears a "flaming grenade" device. The branch insignia of the US Army Ordnance Corps also uses this symbol, the grenade being symbolic of explosive ordnance in general. The United States Marine Corps also uses the grenade on their uniforms: the rank insignia for master gunnery sergeant has three chevrons pointing up, with four rockers on the bottom. In the middle of this is a bursting bomb, or grenade.See also
- Nils Waltersen Aasen, the creator of the modern hand grenade
- Rocket propelled grenade
- Rifle grenade
- Grenade launcher
- Technology of Song Dynasty
- Jiao Yu
Notes
References
Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization
in China: Volume 5, Part 7. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
External links
- RUAG - manufacturer of modern hand grenades
- Mecar - Belgian manufacturer of various grenade types
- Pakistan Ordnance Factories - licensed manufacturer of Arges grenades
- Film of exploding grenade - taken using ultra high-speed photographic technique (2/3 million frames per second)
- How Grenades Work - from HowStuffWorks
- Exploded view of a modern Arges 73 hand grenade
- 90th Infantry Division Preservation Group Article on authentic WW2 pineapple grenades
- Grenade infomation and facts
grenade in Arabic: قنبلة يدوية
grenade in Bulgarian: Граната
grenade in Czech: Granát (zbraň)
grenade in Danish: Håndgranat
grenade in German: Handgranate
grenade in Spanish: Granada (arma)
grenade in French: Grenade à main
grenade in Korean: 수류탄
grenade in Indonesian: Granat tangan
grenade in Italian: Bomba a mano
grenade in Hebrew: רימון יד
grenade in Lithuanian: Granata
grenade in Malay (macrolanguage): Bom
tangan
grenade in Dutch: Handgranaat
grenade in Japanese: 手榴弾
grenade in Norwegian: Håndgranat
grenade in Polish: Granat (broń)
grenade in Portuguese: Granada (arma)
grenade in Romanian: Grenadă
grenade in Russian: Граната
grenade in Simple English: Grenade
grenade in Slovak: Ručný granát
grenade in Finnish: Käsikranaatti
grenade in Swedish: Handgranat
grenade in Thai: ระเบิดมือ
grenade in Vietnamese: Lựu đạn
grenade in Turkish: El bombası
grenade in Ukrainian: Граната
grenade in Yiddish: האנט גראנעיד
grenade in Chinese: 手榴弹