ar·moury armouries in AM, use armory1. A country's armoury is all the weapons and military equipment that it has. Nuclear weapons will play a less prominent part in NATO's armoury in the future
The place where armour is kept "But the sword Of Michael from the armoury of God Was given him " Milton: Paradise Lost, vi 320 See also vii 200
a collection of resources; "he dipped into his intellectual armory to find an answer"
An armoury is a place where weapons, bombs, and other military equipment are stored. = arsenal
You can refer to a large number of things which someone has available for a particular purpose as their armoury. The strongest weapon in the government's armoury is the price cuts announced on Saturday = arsenal
Production system for the assembly of finished products, in this case arms. With the adoption of the Model 1842 musket, the U.S. military achieved the large-scale assembly of weapons from uniform, interchangeable parts. By the mid-1850s arms makers around the world were beginning to copy this American System of manufacture, which contributed to the creation of the modern military small arm, especially after the introduction of percussion ignition and rifled barrels
Heraldry is so called, because it first found its special use in direct connection with military equipments, knightly exercises, and the mêlée of actual battle "Some great man's badge of war or armory " Morris: Earthly Paradise, ii 167