「Troops」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)12ページ目
該当件数 : 4021件
ent of rebels from the rear throwing the Royal | troops into confusion. |
cond Boer War: In South Africa, 20,000 British | troops invade the Orange Free State. |
20 October - Chinese | troops invade Kashmir and capture Aksai Chin |
British | troops invade the island of Saint-Domingue (now Haiti |
6 September - Indian | troops invade Lahore. |
In response the German | troops invaded Italy from the North. |
s before the Absolutist European consortium of | troops invaded Spain again, some 15 years after Napol |
In November 1861, Union Navy and Army | troops invaded Port Royal, south of Charleston and ne |
On May 10, 1940, German | troops invaded Luxembourg, occupying the country for |
same thing happened again in 1719 when Russian | troops invaded the city. |
eptember 1943 Italy capitulated and the Allied | troops invaded South Italy. |
Turkish | troops invaded the Friuli region in northeastern Ital |
After crossing the Aprok River, the Khitan | troops invaded Goryeo. |
In 1864, Prussian and Austrian | troops invaded the region ending over two centuries o |
On June 17, 1940 Soviet | troops invaded Latvia and occupied bridges, post/tele |
Japanese | troops invaded Malaya in December 1941 and began to a |
out in Europe on 1 September 1939, when German | troops invaded Poland. |
A number of French | troops involved in this campaign became casualties as |
sailed on the HMS Invincible with the British | troops involved in the Falklands War. |
In 1648, the village billeted | troops involved in the Battle of Lens. |
almost 20,000 allied (Brazilian and Argentine) | troops involved in the attack were lost; Paraguay los |
e than 1,800 killed and wounded, out of 26,500 | troops involved. |
Troops is a mockumentary film by Kevin Rubio, which m | |
Eastern region with A, B, C, D, E & F | Troops, is heade by Major J.R. Hankins, |
A rank or line of advancing | troops is enfiladed if fired on from the side (flank) |
with all medieval armies the precise number of | troops is difficult to estimate. |
That mass of the French | troops is depicted in one of the stained glass window |
He said 2,000 | troops is quite a sizable number of soldiers and that |
Beginning about 1 June 1945, many of Japanese | troops isolated on the small islands off Okinawa bega |
oving thousands of Jewish settlers and Israeli | troops, Israel hoped to ease tensions. |
r services, but with the withdrawal of British | troops it was soon used to evacuate men back to Engla |
While generally liked by the | troops it was thought to be too heavy and slow to bre |
ficials believe that with an additional 20,000 | troops it can recapture most of southern Somalia. |
hough tasked primarily with training parachute | troops, it was also directed to investigate the possi |
has retained the property as a campground for | troops, it has not served as a summer camp since. |
chelle, surrounded by Royal fortifications and | troops, Jacques Callot, 1630. |
Indian Local Forces and Officer Commanding the | Troops Jamaica (1932 - 1936). |
(commander General of Panzer | troops Joachim Lemelsen) advanced towards, and crosse |
As the day progressed, additional | troops joined both sides. |
The Stuff to Give the | Troops, Jonathan Cape (1944) |
e (they had a tendency to sway a little as the | troops jumped). |
staging area for William Henry Harrison's U.S. | troops, just prior to the invasion of Canada and the |
Relieved by California Volunteer | troops, Ketchum and his regiment assembled in San Ped |
Sunday June 1: U.S. | troops kill a suspected enemy fighter near Lwara. |
hree Thousand and Counting - A tribute to U.S. | Troops killed in Iraq. |
commemorates 4,934 Australian and New Zealand | troops killed in the sector but who have no known gra |
e latest casualty brings the number of foreign | troops killed in Afghanistan this year to 600. |
Of the 20 US | troops killed in the battle, seven were from the Seco |
The Spanish had 8,000 | troops killed or wounded and about 2,000 captured, wh |
In a sharp six-hour fight, Federal | troops killed Morgan's 19-year-old brother, Lt. Thoma |
rights march in Derry in 1972 at which British | troops killed 14 unarmed civilians. |
Kevela's | troops killed Portuguese colonists and burned and dow |
Amongst these are the graves of six Australian | troops killed simultaneously by the same shell. |
(Airmobile) at the cost of 288 United States' | troops killed and 990 wounded. |
It lasted eleven days, during which the U.S. | troops killed more than 125 suspected insurgents and |
was established as a battlefield cemetery for | troops killed in the Battle of the Somme. |
In June of 1988, UMOPAR | troops killed 12 peasants and wounded over 100 in the |
issing; Chevrette lost 92 officers, seamen and | troops killed, including her first captain, and 62 se |
adliest of the war, with more than 560 foreign | troops killed. |
w Ostrogothic hegemony; he also had her Gothic | troops killed. |
an Abu Hishma home, near 4th Infantry Division | troops, killing a local girl picking tomatoes. |
The Sioux called Harney "Woman Killer" for his | troops' killing of non-combatants. |
They chased and attacked the Union | troops, killing some before the soldiers reached the |
bombers watched videos of British and American | troops killing women and children in Iraq before emba |
ith co-founder Harry Hay about Medieval masque | troops known as "mattachines", Gruber suggested chang |
Some of its | troops lacked proper weapons, as stocks of the Arisak |
The | troops lacked training and uniforms, sickness was rif |
he English Civil War Fairfax's Parliamentarian | troops laid siege to a troop of Royalists within the |
11 September - Australian | troops land in German New Guinea. |
18 - World War II: A small number of Canadian | troops land in Brest, France but are forced to evacua |
8 January - British | troops land at Losperds Bay, between Bloubergstrand a |
29 August: 1374 New Zealand | troops land in Samoa and are offered no resistance by |
Canadian | troops landed to destroy mining equipment and two rad |
On 1 April, they provided close support as | troops landed on that enemy bastion. |
he fullest civil and military powers - and his | troops landed in September 1862 in Veracruz. |
nd British destroyers bringing in the seaborne | troops landed their troops on a beach far west from t |
The initial assault | troops landed on 19 February, but Bolivar stood by of |
The British | troops landed and destroyed some sluices and locks to |
As the | troops landed on the 19th, the smaller YMS's were fue |
On October 9, a Confederate force of 1000 | troops landed east of Fort Pickens, but was repelled |
st invasion of this country hundreds of French | troops landed on the foreshore nearby. |
British, French and other Allied | troops landed on the Gallipoli Peninsula on 25 April |
The assault | troops landed unopposed and secured the beachhead; th |
As the assault | troops landed 10 July, Maddox was on antisubmarine pa |
not permit the landing so instead the British | troops landed at Algeciras and marched to Tariffa, la |
Thousands of US and some Canadian | troops landed on 15 August. |
in the Admiralties where she embarked assault | troops landed on the shores of Lingayen Gulf 9 Januar |
1945, Japan surrendered and Allied occupation | troops landed on the main islands, starting the forma |
On 16 February 1945 U.S. | troops landed on Iwo Jima, and on April 1, 1945 on Ok |
age compared to parachute assault was that the | troops landed in one place, rather than being dispers |
On 31 January, Marines and Army | troops landed on Kwajalein and Majuro atolls, while E |
As | troops landed under naval cover on Leyte 20 October, |
British | troops landed onto the islands in May, and inflicted |
the forts and maintained the bombardment while | troops landed near Flag Pond Battery, north of the ma |
Several thousand American | troops landed, in an effort to force out General Vict |
On 10 July she provided fire support for the | troops landing on Sicily to which she escorted suppor |
U.S. and British | troops landing near Gela, Sicily, July 10, 1943. |
in the preinvasion bombardment, she supported | troops landing and fighting ashore, hitting caves and |
These missions included support of ground | troops, landing zone (LZ) preps, interdiction, and co |
approved founding of the United States Colored | Troops, Langston was appointed to recruit African Ame |
His | troops, largely Bulgarian, joined the revolt, and Mic |
Hawkins commanded a division of U.S. Colored | Troops late in the war. |
was in Augusta, Maine, and assisted in raising | troops, later serving as a noncommissioned officer wi |
He was liberated by American | troops later in 1945. |
hen Confederate General Richard Taylor and his | troops later came, she offered them the same warm hos |
lliam Edwards, or the 'Frog", a name the Union | troops later called him. |
Ma Hongbin's Hui Muslim | troops launched further attacks against Japan in the |
Soon after the massacre, government | troops launched an operation in the area to capture t |
hting between the RUF and the government as UN | troops launched Operation Khukri to end the seize. |
he battle started on 10 September, when Indian | troops launched a massive attack at the Phillora sect |
he baby with her as she and the rest of the AU | troops leave the destroyed village behind. |
andhi and Jawaharlal Nehru demand that British | troops leave India. |
post abandoned on February 24, 1865, with the | troops leaving in late April. |
inforce the matrilines as they move off to new | troops leaving their natal troops. |
Federal | troops led by Robert E. Lee were sent to put down the |
His musical talks to the | troops led him to meet his future wife, whom he marri |
During World War 2 Italian and Libyan colonial | troops led by Col. Salvatore Castagna resisted for ni |
Moreover, the 26th advanced farther than the | troops led by General Lewis Addison Armistead of Pick |
ch other, and there is a showdown with British | troops led by Major Carlyle (Gareth Reeves). |
h units were immediately reinforced by Italian | troops led personally by Victor Emmanuel, which arriv |
gades and, without waiting for the rest of his | troops, led that brigade against the numerically supe |
The Yemeni government | troops led a military operation against the insurgent |
e fort came under direct Confederate attack by | troops led by Maj. |
pay convoy evaded Rupert, and Parliamentarian | troops led by Sir Philip Stapleton and Colonel John H |
A force of some 2,000 French | troops led by Gen. Louis Ferrand resisted a siege of |
le that took place in 1861 between Confederate | troops led by General Sterling Price and Federal troo |
only to discover that it was blocked by Union | troops led by Maj. |
3 May - War of the Spanish Succession: English | troops led by John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough |
st success, managing to defeat Imperial German | troops led by General August von Mackensen. |
After leaving San Patricio, Viesca met Texian | troops led by Ira Westover, who had recently defeated |
Although the | troops led by the PCE rejected the coup on Madrid the |
As a result, Justinian ordered his loyal | troops led by two reliable officers, Belisarius and M |
ptember, San Antonio was surrounded by Mexican | troops led by General Adrian Woll. |
The election was cancelled after | troops led by Service d'Intelligence National member |
When Federal | troops left Arizona early in 1861, the territory was |
gather their dead and injured, and if British | troops left the square. |
The last US | troops left Uzbekistan in November 2005. |
American | troops left after the Cuban government signed a bill |
from 15 August to 4 September, the Republican | troops left Cabrera. |
The last NZ | Troops left Vietnam on 22 December 1972. |
The last Allied | troops left the area in 1930. |
United States entry into World War I, but most | troops left in 1919. |
General der Panzertruppen (General of Armoured | Troops) Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg (from 1700 hours 2 |
UFPJ's being more open to draw-downs of | troops, less specifically committed to demands for im |
he Operation Barbarossa, the retreating Soviet | troops levelled the village to the ground. |
tate and government of increasing peacekeeping | troops levels in Somalia. |
After Dusong Pass is overrun by Liangshan | troops, Li Tianrun encounters Lu Junyi and fights wit |
When U.S. | troops liberated the camp on February 3, 1945, Bradle |
The area was besieged until January 1944 when | troops linked up with the main Soviet forces breaking |
anied Mercer to Camp Julien, where many of the | troops live in large tents. |
German | troops loading for transport to the front about 1915. |
he trouble began when SOS (Services of Supply) | troops, long stationed in Oran, closed their clubs an |
Raimbaud himself did not lead his | troops long. |
the expedition to Walcheren in 1809 where many | troops lost their lives to fever in the Scheldt marsh |
during the pro-Bolshevik mutiny when Ukrainian | troops loyal to Tsentral'na Rada attacked |
fewer hours Lisbon was completely occupied by | troops loyal to the MFA. |
Petrograd and went to Pskov, where he rallied | troops loyal to his cause in an attempt to retake the |
conflict of the Boshin War on the side of the | troops loyal to the Shogun, against the newly formed |
key government buildings were to be seized by | troops loyal to the Sakurakai |
He was murdered in 1967 by | troops loyal to the federal side during the crisis of |
ent, was injured in a suspicious car accident, | troops loyal to Adrisi (and other soldiers who were d |
cal: Luo's skillful political work ensured the | troops' loyalty and popular support of the communists |
They fall into a pit and are killed by enemy | troops lying in ambush. |
es 256 acres (1.04 km2) where African American | troops made their first major assault in the Civil Wa |
At this point the British | troops made a final assault in a merciless struggle. |
At 04.00 on 15 June, Indian | troops made a frontal attack which fortuitously coinc |
That evening, Bernadotte's | troops made it to Burg Stargard, 8 kilometres (5 mi) |
s discipline for which he became known and his | troops maintained good order, despite the many abuses |
The returning | troops make a triumphal entry into Jalalabad, where f |
Apache Snow continued until June 7, with U.S. | troops making limilted contact with the enemy. |
e Porsangerfjord in a small boat, which German | troops managed to board. |
ly wrecked structure, which the Irish Jacobite | troops managed to destroy despite coming under intens |
Only 2,000 of Jellacic's | troops managed to join John at Graz. |
Israeli | troops managed to fight their way to the top of the h |
In the opening engagements, Neapolitan | troops managed to surround and capture General Bianch |
ruary, although a sizable contingent of Soviet | troops managed to escape north. |
Russian | troops managing to close to less than 200 meters befo |
Valdes' | troops maneuvered up the mountains in the area. |
disposal, Falckenstein had three divisions of | troops, many of whom were not front-line soldiers, co |
It housed 6,000 German | troops, many of Adolf Hitler's Afrika Corps who had b |
With march battalions, rear | troops, marauders and raw recruits, he prepared the c |
General Robert E. Lee and his | troops march on Washington, D.C., and launch an assau |
Fort Mason was evacuated by Federal | troops, March 29, 1861 and reoccupied after the Civil |
During the Battle of Bunker Hill, some British | troops marched through the Boston suburb of Charlesto |
Government | troops marched into Saga the following day. |
40,000 Han | troops marched on both sides of the Tarim Basin and m |
In January 982 the German | troops marched towards the Byzantine Apulia to annex |
He claimed that his | troops marched to defend the right of self-determinat |
In 1775, as the British | troops marched into Concord, the Concord Minutemen to |
After this initial engagement, the British | troops marched on to Concord. |
Riego's | troops marched through the cities of Andalusia with t |
On February 16, early in the morning Russian | troops marched into Erzurum. |
of the Helvetic Republic, French Revolutionary | troops marched into the Fricktal. |
Summoned to the east by Bonaparte, some of his | troops marched and others crossed the lake by boat to |
During the Civil War, Union | troops marching toward Selma burned the courthouse an |
Footage of rows of war material, | troops marching and locomotives are cleverly edited t |
ief War of the Oranges begins, with the French | troops marching on Portugal, later followed by Spanis |
Troops marching through town c. 1918 | |
f how the land would have been in 1781 for the | troops marching through. |
utinous soldiers forcibly tried to prevent the | troops marching off. |
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