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Yes. .50 caliber machine guns weren't invented for war until WWII, but other guns and artillery had large rounds. (bullets)
The two bullets fired to assasinate Francis Ferdinand (German Franz Ferdinand), archduke of Austria, were the start of WW1.
Stermgewehr. Also known as Mp44 and Stg-44. Browning 1919 No, no, no. The Sturmgewehr (aka Mp43 or Stg44) was the first assault rifle used in WW2. The Browning M1919 was not made until WW1 ended. Most of the machine guns used in WW1 were based on the Maxim design. They were heavy and cooled by water, but they would fire indefinitely as long as ammo and water were available. The Lewis machine gun used by the British was lighter and cooled by air. After WW1, water-cooled machine began to fade away slowly. The Browning M1919 was basically the same machine gun used in WW1 but converted to air cooling instead of water.
Most of them sadly died, or if they had survived the barbed wire and bullets, after the war some wrote poetry or went completely insane.
Tanks in WWI were used to break the deadlock of trench warfare. Early tanks were slow and had mechanical problems limiting their effectiveness during WWI.in ww1 tanks were supposed to be used for bombing soldiers or trenches for shooting soldiers and were able to stand against bullets bombs or gas bombs, but in ww1 the tank was used to early it didn't go through the test enough times to prove it was war worthy and the opposing side copied the idea they destroyed tanks at war and made there own but more stronger.