Holster in a sentence as a noun

On the holster and not the weapon would make sense.

That was a guy who allegedly had had a gun and was wearing an empty holster when caught.

One even flipped open his holster holding his pistol before talking to me in front of the subway.

I think policemen are specifically trained to take the gun out of the holster and press the trigger in such situations.

So in this type of scenario the 12-gauge isn't bad, but I'd probably still prefer a pistol on an over the waist band or shoulder holster.

Carrying a long gun on a sling implies the ability to do a lot of damage, but not the intent; it's similar to having a pistol in a holster.

It's hard to remember that previous status quo in a post-iPhone world, but the people walking around with a BlackBerry in a belt holster then weren't unlike the people wearing Google Glass now.

I can go into details as to why I believe that's the case, but to start with, whenever I walk outside the door I put my carry gun into a holster, and then never take it out until I return home.

> a manager would rather work with GabriellaManagers avoid Gabriellas because Gabriellas try to get out of their coding jobs as fast as they can, usually by going for the manager's job, usually with a few freshly sharpened knives in their holster.> [Gabriella] takes 30 lines to write what should be written in 15 or 20That's a typo.

Holster definitions

noun

a sheath (usually leather) for carrying a handgun

noun

a belt with loops or slots for carrying small hand tools