Depends on where you are. In MOST of the US, there is no requirement for registration of common firearms. The dealer must maintain a record of sales, but there is no "registration" per se.
Depends on where you live. In MOST of the United States, there is no requirement or provision for registering ordinary firearms. When you buy a gun from a dealer, the dealer makes a record of the sale, and must retain that record for a period of 20 years in the gunshop files. That all firearms must be registered with some government agency is a common incorrect assumption. In other nations, other rules.
NFA tax stamped short-barreled rifles/shotguns and full auto weapons are registered in the course of the licencing process. Normal Category I firearms (semi auto, bolt action, lever action, single shot, etc.) firearms are not, and, in most states, are not required to be registered.
Do you want to become a dealer in machineguns, silencers, short-barreled shotguns, etc? Or do you just want to OWN one and have it legally registered under your name? I don't know about the dealer's license, but for ownership of one of these NFA (National Firearms Act) weapons, it's $200 tax (once for as long as you own it) to the feds plus some small fees to your local law enforcement agency for running your fingerprints and doing a background check on you.
Unlikely. Most firearms must ship to a licensed dealer.
Florida- as in MOST of the US, does not have registration of ordinary firearms. When a dealer sells a gun, he must maintain a record of the sale (at his shop) for 20 years, but there is no government registration.
It did not become a sport until firearms were commonArchery did not become a sport until firearms were invented.
Depends on the laws in your state or country. In the US, firearms registration is virtually nonexistent, save for NFA regulated firearms, and in the state of California (which, even then, is very limited in the scope of what gets registered).
Like MOST states in the US, Wisconsin has NO requirements to register ordinary rifles, shotguns, or handguns. When you purchase a firearm from a dealer, the dealer retains a record of the sale at his premises. But there is no central registry of firearms.
Out of my thirteen firearms none are not registered. Why are my firearms not registered you may ask... why do you think they need to be? There are no laws in my state requiring that my firearms be registered and any law that would require registration would be unconstotutional. Few states require registration, and theses that do are states that have many unconstitutional laws ignoring the second amendment.
Colorado does not have registration of ordeinary firearms, so there is no way to have a gun registered to you.
Law enforcement only.