The term claymore (from Scottish Gaelic claidheamh mòr, "big sword") may refer to one of two distinct types of Scottish swords: it may refer to a two-handed sword with a cross hilt, of which the guards were usually turned down, used by the Highlanders of Scotland; or to a basket-hilted
A single-edged broadsword having a hilt with a basketwork design, introduced in Scotland in the 16th century
A type of antipersonnel mine
claymore mine: an antipersonnel land mine whose blast is aimed at the oncoming enemy
a large double-edged broadsword; formerly used by Scottish Highlanders
A two-edged broadsword used by Scottish Highlanders
A modern combat sport in which participants eliminate their opponents by hitting them with spherical non-metallic pellets launched from a compressed-air gun
Airsoft is primarily a recreational activity with replica firearms that shoot plastic BBs that are often used for personal collection, gaming (similar to paintball), or professional training purposes (military simulations, a.k.a. MilSim, and police training exercises).
Airsoft refers to a class of replica air powered guns that originated from Japan (although the origins go back to the US in the 70s). The power levels are way below those of traditional airguns, but the guns are 1:1 scale copies of original pistols, rather than original designs.
The M18A1 Claymore is a directional anti-personnel mine used by the U.S. military. It was named after the large Scottish sword by its inventor, Norman A. MacLeod.