Any gun that shoot a 9 millimeter bullet.
The .380 automatic cannot shoot 9mm Parabellum ammo.
It is A 9mm- a 9mm Short. However, when most people say "9 mm" they mean the 9mm Parabellum, also known as 9mm Luger. That is a different cartridge than the .380.
10mm is more than 9mm.
Depends on which powder, and which loading of the 9mm.
.380 ACP is 9x17mm. That's the only cartridge that gun can fire. 9x19mm (a.k.a., 9mm Parabellum or 9mm Luger) and 9x18mm (a.k.a., 9mm Makarov) are NOT compatible with these guns.
A 9mm of some type. What markings are on it?
No.
.380 ACP is 9x17mm. That's the only cartridge that gun can fire. 9x19mm (a.k.a., 9mm Parabellum or 9mm Luger) and 9x18mm (a.k.a., 9mm Makarov) are NOT compatible with these guns.
9x19 millimeter parabellum
depends on which 9mm and which gun. The 9mm Parabellum (9mm Luger) fired from an average pistol travels ABOUT 1200 feet per second.
They are the same, but the word 9mm is shorter. I disagree: when you buy a gun that is 9mm it will be different bullets that you buy- 9mm, ironically, are longer. So yes, a 9mm is stronger. Please specify whether you mean the gun itself, or the round you intend to be firing.