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「U-boats」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| Ironically, most | U-boats achieved notoriety for the number of kills th |
| On 21st the 3 boats from Bordeaux, and the | U-boats again prepared to attack. |
| nding performance helped lessen the threat of | U-boats against Allied shipping. |
| The escorts of ONS-5 had sunk five | U-boats; Allied aircraft, one. |
| U-889 was one of ten | U-boats allocated to the United States as part of the |
| moved to New Zealand by boat, dodging German | U-boats along the way, where his father took up a pos |
| eclared a zone 60 miles square, prohibited to | U-boats and centered on that seamount. |
| e Battle of the Atlantic as a defence against | U-boats and German commerce raiders. |
| he first of many tours of duty at sea hunting | U-boats and shepherding convoys to their destinations |
| issance aircraft, nor by any of the Eisenbart | U-boats, and crossed the Norwegian and Barents Seas w |
| rbour mouth and prevent the transit of German | U-boats and other raiding craft from Bruges to the No |
| re unable to mount any serious attacks on the | U-boats, and had to spend much of their time rescuing |
| crambled from Iceland drove off the remaining | U-boats, and the convoy reached Liverpool on 10 Novem |
| hips and 2 warships, for the destruction of 4 | U-boats and another 5 damaged. |
| McDougal made several unsuccessful attacks on | U-boats, and rescued survivors of ships sunk by the G |
| ot up in response, improved torpedoes, better | U-boats, and much better operational planning led to |
| teamer mistook O-4 and O-6 (SS-67) for German | U-boats and fired on the submarines. |
| first part of the year she made contact with | U-boats and once, on 10 February, fired torpedoes, bu |
| ed the Atlantic coast guarding against German | U-boats and escorted coastal shipping besides serving |
| rted that Pathfinder had been attacked by two | U-boats and had accounted for the second one in her d |
| atrolled the surrounding ocean, searching for | U-boats and surface raiders and preventing them from |
| U-boat group, code-named "Ice Palace", of 12 | U-Boats, and a surface attack force of 8 warships, th |
| ipping was organised into convoys, but German | u-boats and surface raiders still inflicted considera |
| II the group was ordered to search for German | U-Boats and to fly aerial coverage of friendly convoy |
| to the aid of convoys under attack by German | U-boats, and help to escort the convoys in and out of |
| II the group was ordered to search for German | U-Boats and to fly aerial coverage of friendly convoy |
| The main danger is from | U-boats and aircraft. |
| other ships from Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine | U-boats and fighter aircraft, Andres performed escort |
| It was attacked by around thirty | U-boats, and lost thirteen ships in total, while seve |
| Schill comprised ten | U-boats, and commenced operations on 25 October. |
| ff the Atlantic Coast of France to patrol for | U-boats and provide support for convoys into Brest Fr |
| convoy were being picked off individually by | U-boats and aircraft. |
| USS Frost (DE-144) sank 5 German | U-boats and awarded Presidential Unit Citation, 7 bat |
| aissance and offshore patrol to locate German | U-boats and their victims along the New England coast |
| ated in anti-submarine warfare against German | U-Boats and escorted Allied coastal convoys along the |
| II the group was ordered to search for German | U-Boats and to fly aerial coverage of friendly convoy |
| was used extensively and effectively against | U-Boats, and on the decks of larger ships. |
| sea, closing the harbour and trapping the 18 | U-boats and 25 destroyers present for months to come. |
| matting the threat posed to Allied convoys by | U-boats, and the experience with the interim DAR equi |
| II the group was ordered to search for German | U-Boats and to fly aerial coverage of friendly convoy |
| nctuated by encounters with real or suspected | U-boats and, during the autumn of 1918, with outbreak |
| The following German | U-Boats are reported to have been sunk somewhere in t |
| These two | U-boats are also thought to have carried Uranium oxid |
| The submarine pens made for holding German | U-boats are now being used as a harbour area for civi |
| Both | U-boats arrived at Batavia in December 1944. |
| y escort vessels and three Type XXIII coastal | U-boats, arriving in Horten two days later. |
| Thirty-nine of the 42 | U-boats assigned to 12th Flotilla were destroyed duri |
| Leigh Light - which enabled bombers to attack | U-boats at night. |
| By 6 October Rossbach, comprising 14 | U-boats at this point, was deployed to intercept the |
| 9 torpedoes, and were used to re-supply other | U-boats at sea. |
| Battle Beneath the Waves: | U-boats at War. Cassell Military Paperbacks. |
| A mass of surrendered German | U-boats at their mooring at Lisahally |
| During the night of 15/16 October the | U-boats attacked but were repelled; U-844 was damaged |
| Upon reaching Penang, this group of | U-boats became part of 33rd U-boat Flotilla, which al |
| experiments were soon put into practice when | U-boats began attacking Allied shipping bound for Eur |
| erted to military specification as Type U 151 | U-boats, being designated U-151 to U-154. |
| Type 87 was a class of | U-boats built during World War I by the Kaiserliche M |
| U 31 was a class of | U-boats built during World War I by the Kaiserliche M |
| Mittel U was a class of | U-boats built during World War I by the Kaiserliche M |
| s the first of the highly advanced Type XXIII | U-boats built for the Kriegsmarine in 1944 and 1945. |
| Type 93 was a class of | U-boats built during World War I by the Kaiserliche M |
| ng a French cruiser, were torpedoed by German | U-boats, but Hisko escaped unscathed with her valuabl |
| a convoy spotted and then hunted down by the | U-boats, but this gives enough information for the ne |
| During World War II mainly the | u-boats, but also other ships needed to be supplied a |
| tinople Flotilla had a maximum strength of 11 | U-boats but due to the unfavourable conditions for co |
| h Isles, St Albans made a score of attacks on | U-boats but could not repeat her "kill" performance o |
| groups aggressive defence caused damage to 5 | U-boats, but no kills, while 5 ships were sunk. |
| talents to the war effort, helping to locate | U-boats by means of the application of spherical trig |
| r deck gun, increased the displacement of the | U-boats by almost 100 tonnes (110 short tons) surface |
| Q-Ships Versus | U-Boats, by Kenneth M. Beyer. |
| Type 93 | U-boats carried 16 torpedoes and had various arrangem |
| Type 81 | U-boats carried 12 torpedoes and had various arrangem |
| U 31 | U-boats carried 6 torpedoes and were originally armed |
| Mittel U | U-boats carried 16 torpedoes and had various arrangem |
| One of just four | U-boats converted to Flak boats, U-256 was given an i |
| nd that the day's events occurred because the | U-boats could not be found; he concludes that "there |
| showing that while determined mass attack by | U-boats could break through convoy defences, this wou |
| phia, Pennsylvania, on coastal patrol against | U-boats, cruising from Cape Cod to Key West, Florida. |
| was originally one of seven Deutschland class | U-boats designed to carry cargo between the United St |
| volved the ships and escorts of ONS 20, saw 6 | U-boats destroyed for the loss of one ship. |
| U-boats destroyed | |
| SC 94 saw 11 ships sunk and two | U-boats destroyed in a six-day running battle; Broke |
| n in Duncan helped to destroy two of the nine | U-boats destroyed in these battles. |
| These were the last | U-boats destroyed in action in American waters; on 8 |
| U-boats Destroyed: The Effect of Anti-submarine Warfa | |
| The | U-boats discontinued the attack on 26 February. |
| ss the English Channel, which had resulted in | U-boats diverting north around Scotland. |
| roup succeeded in sinking at least three more | U-boats during his tenure as commander of the 36th Gr |
| fer or BOLD was a German SONAR decoy, used by | U-boats during the Second World War from 1942 onwards |
| Dover Patrol which kept the Channel free from | U-boats during World War I. |
| GRT), was also among the largest ships hit by | U-boats during the war. |
| and anti-shipping missions in support of the | U-Boats during the Battle of the Atlantic campaign. |
| n of war being readied for use against German | U-boats during the First World War. |
| This was one of the largest ships sunk by | U-boats during the war. |
| aircraft were involved in the sinking of four | U-boats during her service. |
| lacement was one of the largest ships sunk by | U-boats during the war.. UC-14 was mined and sunk on |
| t only a re-configured Neuland, comprising 13 | U-boats, engaged HX 228. |
| o Bletchley Park to help find the code to the | U-Boats' Enigma communications. |
| tle of the Atlantic during which Germany Navy | U-boats enjoyed significant success against the Briti |
| from Pendennis to St Mawes, to prevent enemy | U-boats entering the harbour. |
| The last | U-boats escaped by sea, and Scholtz attempted to lead |
| Several | U-boats escaped Operation Deadlight. |
| Most | U-boats failed to sink any ship. |
| Both | U-boats failed to reach Bismarck on time. |
| specifically seeking out and engaging German | U-boats, for which he received a letter of commendati |
| During his career he commanded two | U-boats for a total of 118 days at sea spanning four |
| It was composed of | U-boats from the disbanded patrol group Schill, with |
| marine) had established a patrol line of four | U-boats from Kirkenes to search for the convoy, but i |
| sed convoys effectively cutting off the small | U-boats from their potential targets. |
| 8 and ON 202, which were travelling together; | U-boats from Leuthen sank 6 ships (of 36,442 GRT and |
| 0 and ON 206, which were travelling together; | U-boats from Schlieffen sank one ship of 6625 GRT, bu |
| The objective was to prevent | U-boats from operating in the North Atlantic and prey |
| game centers on commanding Kaiserliche Marine | U-boats from the beginning of the War in 1914 to its |
| World War II German | U-boats generally had collapse depths in the range of |
| ermans of a new British minefield "where [the | U-boats] go to fix their position." |
| e not able to be fueled in England, as German | U-boats had drained their supply. |
| German | U-Boats had only moderate cruising range in this war |
| By 1918, the Kaiser's fleet of | U-boats had acquired sufficient strength to be able t |
| ircraft, the bombers actually confronting the | U-Boats had to be moved out to Edinburgh (Carlsen) Ai |
| nghamshire, England, have a problem: the Nazi | U-boats have increased the security of key-changing o |
| y one other Castle class corvette was sunk by | U-boats, HMS Denbigh Castle on 13 February 1945. |
| ircraft helped to turn the tables on foraging | U-boats in the North Atlantic and also assisted in op |
| The flotilla trained newly-commissioned | U-boats in the firing of torpedoes (Torpedoschiessaus |
| IAH was hastened as the threat of the German | U-boats in the Atlantic and Caribbean increased. |
| Hartmann became FdU Mittelmeer ("Commander of | U-boats in the Mediterranean") and in this post recei |
| start of World War I, Germany had twenty-nine | U-boats in service; in the first ten weeks, five Brit |
| He is notable as being the commander of | U-boats in the Indian Ocean, whereby German and Japan |
| e shore based HF DF stations in 1944 to track | U-boats in the North Atlantic. |
| ships and 3 escorts, for the destruction of 3 | U-boats, in the first battle of KM's autumn offensive |
| distinguished work in protecting convoys from | U-boats in the Battle of the Atlantic in 1918, he was |
| ships with an evacuation route from Germany's | U-boats in World War II along with dangerous shoals o |
| e on 24 April 1916, Scheer ordered all of the | U-boats in the Atlantic to return to Germany and aban |
| the anti-submarine aircraft operating against | U-boats in the Western Approaches and the Bay of Bisc |
| was the first U.S. naval ship sunk by German | U-boats in World War II. |
| e hunter-killer operations which defeated the | U‑boats in the Atlantic. |
| though Austria was, UC 12, like other German | U-boats in the Mediterranean, operated under the Aust |
| uly 1943 and flew killer hunts against German | U-Boats in the Bay of Biscay off the western coast of |
| h its lights off for fear of assisting German | U-Boats in their operations, and the light was only t |
| ust 1943 and flew killer hunts against German | U-Boats in the Bay of Biscay off the western coast of |
| re lost from the group, which accounted for 2 | U-boats in its career. |
| e convoy was undetected by German aircraft or | U-boats in the continuous darkness of the polar night |
| t seven ships while Escort Group B-6 sank two | U-boats in October 1942. |
| Because of the fear of | U-boats in the Gulf, all radio traffic from ships was |
| SM UB-48 was one of the most successful | U-boats in the German Navy during World War I. |
| Ranged against them were 58 | U-boats in 3 patrol lines; Specht (Woodpecker) with 1 |
| troyer escorts to hunt down weather-reporting | U-boats in the Atlantic. |
| le, which had taken refuge from attack by two | U-boats in the neutral port of Horta, in the Azores. |
| New York twice encountered | U-boats, including a surprise underwater collision th |
| rface fleet was virtually unable to fight the | U-boats, indeed the british navy suffered heavy losse |
| d near Valona, was a part of a force of three | U-boats intended to intercept British and Italian shi |
| rols were predictable and could be avoided by | U-boats, inter-service co-operation was poor, and the |
| ted the construction and commissioning of any | U-boats into the German navy, and as part of the Germ |
| ubmarines on patrol, Doenitz deployed several | U-Boats into the Gulf and Caribbean for operations. |
| “This seven day battle, fought against thirty | U-boats, is marked only by latitude and longitude, an |
| g the Norwegian coast for coastal traffic and | U-boats leaving or entering base. |
| In August 1944 the last | U-boats left the base for Norway and the flotilla was |
| h machine guns and depth charges, killing the | U-boats lookouts and AA crew and rupturing the pressu |
| U-537 was one of 10 German | U-boats lost in Asian or East African waters during t |
| This he did successfully for two weeks; no | U-boats managed to get past Walker and his vessels, a |
| The two | U-boats met on the 12th and 13th near the Faroe Islan |
| They were one of the few military | U-Boats not bearing "U-numbers", probably since they |
| attack tactics against convoys used by German | U-boats of the Kriegsmarine during the Battle of the |
| U-215 was one of six | U-boats of its kind, equipped with special vertical t |
| U-216 was one of six | U-boats of its kind, equipped with special vertical t |
| They were the largest | U-boats of World War I. |
| Ranged against this force were the | U-boats of the German arctic flotilla, 16 U-boats for |
| on nine patrols on one of the most successful | U-boats of World War II. |
| In early June, following warnings of German | U-boats off the East Coast, G-3 conducted a number of |
| r these ports, there were frequent attacks by | U-boats on convoys departing for Europe. |
| ia claimed to have sighted and engaged German | U-boats on several occasions during her wartime servi |
| a modified anti-aircraft turret developed for | U-boats on the Panzer IV chassis, which was armed wit |
| hs, she ranged shipping lanes, sighting enemy | U-boats on three occasions. |
| n aboard El Occidente exchanged fire with two | U-boats, one on the port and one on the starboard. |
| uble-hulled and based on the German Type UE 2 | U-boats, one of which, U-120 was supplied to the Ital |
| either easier or harder by removing or adding | U-Boats or aircraft such as 'Kate' Bombers. |
| rn Ship Channel, a potential access route for | U-boats or for torpedoes fired from outside of the ha |
| Holtzendorff's directive ordered all | U-boats out of the English Channel and the South-West |
| Holtzendorff's directive from ordered all | U-boats out of the English Channel and the South-West |
| er of the operation saw the destruction of 20 | U-boats over a nine-week period, 2 SG's time was unpr |
| In 1916 whilst hunting German | U-boats, Penelope was torpedoed and badly damaged by |
| f so many ships, and the destruction of three | U-boats, plus a fourth incidental kill, and six shado |
| had a far longer service life than most other | U-boats, primarily due to the restricted zone of oper |
| e U-26 was one of the two Type IA ocean-going | U-boats produced by the German Kriegsmarine. |
| s one of the three Type U 13 gasoline-powered | U-boats produced by the German Empire for the Kaiserl |
| German | U-boats quickly became a serious threat on the East C |
| w from Ballykelly in the fight against German | U-boats, ranging from the Bay of Biscay to northern N |
| eird coincidences which occur in wartime, the | U-Boats received their Naxos 10 cm detectors on the s |
| On 22 November the thirteen | U-boats remaining formed a patrol line west of Portug |
| The KM had approximately 470 | U-boats remaining. |
| The | U-boats retired eastward. |
| December Weddigen was disbanded, a number of | U-boats returning to base, while others formed a cadr |
| Although German | U-boats sank over 100,000 tons of shipping in each of |
| Neistle gives the total of | U-boats scuttled as 195, of which half were destroyed |
| As one of six | U-boats selected for service in the Mediterranean whi |
| he force sank ships totalling 117,093 GRT. 14 | U-boats served in the Constantinople Flotilla; 6 were |
| drons had been responsible for sinking twelve | U-boats, sharing with other aircraft and surface ship |
| Learning of the possible proximity of German | U-boats, she conducted four-day patrols off Block Isl |
| appears that she never saw combat with German | U-boats, she did witness the results of their depreda |
| decided that small vessels, torpedo boats and | U-boats, should be transported from the German bight |
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