Carronade

/ˈkærənəd/ noun

A short, lightweight cannon used on ships in the 18th and 19th centuries that was effective at close range but couldn't shoot far.

Named after Carron, a town in Scotland where these cannons were manufactured starting in the 1770s. The suffix '-ade' was added following the pattern of other cannon types like 'grenade.' The word became widely used in naval warfare during the Napoleonic Wars.

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