To fire constantly at a hiding opponent, preventing them from firing at other players and trapping them behind the barrier. This can also refer to eliminating an opponent behind cover by rushing the position and firing at extremely close range as the player becomes exposed
A large container or bin for storing coal, often built outside in the yard of a house. Now rare, as different types of fuels and energy sources are being used
A hazard filled by sand or grass that is placed where a fairway shot may end (by a green or driving distance from the tee) You are not allowed to practice swing or ground your club in a bunker
A place to hold coal on an locomotive without a tender Usually placed behind the footplate
A "bunker" is a hazard consisting of a prepared area of ground, often a hollow, from which turf or soil has been removed and replaced with sand or the like Grass-covered ground bordering or within a bunker is not part of the bunker The margin of a bunker extends vertically downward, but not upwards
an indistinct term that generally means a heavily built structure, usually a shelter against bombardment, that may or may not have provisions for defense; no specific meaning in coast defense; comes into popular use during WWI
a hazard on a golf course a fortification of earth; mostly or entirely below ground hit a golf ball into a bunker transfer cargo from a ship to a warehouse fill (a ship's bunker) with coal or oil
A natural or artificial depression on a fairway or round the green It is usually half -filled with sand but can be made of earth or grass
A pit containing sand and used as a trap as they do not allow for easy play out of that surface Also known as sand trap
Hence, any rough hazardous ground on the links; also, an artificial hazard with built-up faces
Space in which fuel for the vessel is stored on board The expression bunkers denotes the fuel itself
A bunker is a place, usually underground, that has been built with strong walls to protect it against heavy gunfire and bombing. an extensive network of fortified underground bunkers
Bunkers are sand pits or traps, but can be grass hollows, which are situated in various positions throughout a golf course Their aim is to punish a poorly hit shot from the golfer
On a golf course, a bunker is a large area filled with sand, which is deliberately put there as an obstacle that golfers must try to avoid. to hit a golf ball into a bunker
A natural or artificial depression on a fairway or round the green It is usually half-filled with sand but can be made of earth or grass