See canon
Image:Armata_z_bastionu_%C5%9Bw._Rocha_%28twierdza_Jasna_G%C3%B3ra%29.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A cannon (artillery piece)
Origin circa 1400 A.D. from canon, from cannone, from canna.
This spelling was not fixed until circa 1800.XHTML::MediaWiki::Parser=HASH(0x891e9fc)Barnhart, Robert K.; Editor. The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology. 1995 HarperResource/HarperCollins P.102.XHTML::MediaWiki::Parser=HASH(0x891e9fc)XHTML::MediaWiki::Parser=HASH(0x891e9fc)Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged. Merriam-Webster, 2002. http://unabridged.merriam-webster.com (December 26, 2006).XHTML::MediaWiki::Parser=HASH(0x891e9fc)
XHTML::MediaWiki::Parser=HASH(0x891e9fc)
Category:English invariant nouns Category:English nouns with irregular plurals Category:Military
ar:cannon fr:cannon gl:cannon ko:cannon io:cannon it:cannon hu:cannon pl:cannon ru:cannon fi:cannon ta:cannon te:cannon vi:cannon tr:cannon zh:cannon