Colt
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Colt can refer to:
Contents |
[edit] The animal
- Colt (horse), a young male horse or other equid
[edit] Firearms company and related
- Colt's Manufacturing Company, an American firearm company
- Samuel Colt, its founder
- Colt revolver, a firearm made by the company
- Colt 45
- Colt Defense, a firearm company split from the parent company in 2002.
- The Colt, a fictional firearm depicted in the U.S. television series Supernatural
[edit] Sports
- Indianapolis Colts, a National Football League franchise which prior to 1984 was based in Baltimore
- Houston Astros, a Major League Baseball franchise previously known as the Houston Colt .45s
- Barrie Colts, an Ontario Hockey League franchise
[edit] Aviation and transport
- Piper PA-22-108 Colt, an aircraft used for training pilots
- The Antonov An-2 biplane's NATO reporting name
- Mitsubishi Colt, a supermini built by Mitsubishi Motors
- Colt Car Company, the British importer of Mitsubishi Motors
- Colt International, a provider of contract aviation fuel and flight planning services
[edit] Other businesses
- COLT Telecom Group plc, a European telecommunications company
- COLT Studio Group, producers of gay pornography
[edit] People and characters
- Colt Brennan, an American football quarterback at the University of Hawaiʻi.
- The mascot of Parkway Central High School
- A major character in the animated television series Saber Rider and the Star Sheriffs
- J. M. Colt, an occasional character in the original Star Trek TV series
- Judah Colt, early settler of Erie County, Pennsylvania
[edit] Acronyms
- Combat Observation Laser Teams, an artillery observer responsible for directing laser-guided munitions
- Computational learning theory, the mathematical field machine learning algorithms
[edit] Other
- The juvenile crane (bird)
- A share taxi used in Indonesia
- Colt, Arkansas, a city in St. Francis County, Arkansas
- The Colts Drum and Bugle Corps, a modern Division I drum and bugle corps from Dubuque, Iowa
- Conditional Outdoor Leadership Theory (Priest & Gass, 1997)