意味 | 共起表現 |
「apaches」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 81件
Apaches: A History and Culture Portrait (Doubleday, 1 | |
he same day, but this time it was escorted by | Apaches, A-10s and an AC-130 Spectre gunship, that su |
Reporters dubbed them | Apaches, after the Native American Apache tribe, and |
In response, the | Apaches again attacked, setting fire to the buildings |
The ways of the | Apaches and the Mexicans mingled with the lives of th |
ere nomadic buffalo hunters, almost certainly | Apaches, and they inhabited the Llano Estacado. |
as related to the Apache Wars fought between | Apaches and the Americans between 1851 and 1900. |
tion, San Antonio continued to be attacked by | Apaches, and he received, the first reports indicatin |
th in 2009), Nordahl has returned to painting | Apaches and other subjects. |
lahan led an effort to repel attacks of Lipan | Apaches and to capture runaway slaves. |
ck to Mexico, the large party was ambushed by | Apaches, and all were killed except for a few Peralta |
s from a legend of the Apache tribe: about 75 | Apaches and the US Cavalry fought on a mountain overl |
To the other Western | Apaches and adjacent Tonto Apache bands and Chiricahu |
Military Academy in 1852, served against the | Apaches and Utes in New Mexico in 1853-57, and was as |
Using A-36 | Apaches and P-51 Mustangs, the group supported Allied |
The school's sports teams are called the | Apaches and the Lady Apaches. |
The | Apaches are only the fifth team in FHSAA history to h |
m there, the Battalion was to act against the | Apaches as well as patrol the International Line agai |
States Army and a group of Yavapai and Tonto | Apaches as part of Lieutenant Colonel George Crook's |
Most chronicles of the time regarded | Apaches as the biggest menace, but Yuman-speaking Yav |
1864 Lipan | Apaches attack the family of George Schwander in the |
n Attack Helicopter Battalion operating AH-64 | Apaches attack and OH-58 Kiowa scout helicopters. |
On March 11, 1873, a band of Tonto | Apaches attacked and killed three white men. |
e following day, Cochise and a large party of | Apaches attacked a group of Americans and captured th |
The Arizona Guards pursued the | Apaches back to Cooke's Canyon, where they attempted |
and Lay-a-Bet, was one of the last Chiricahua | Apaches born under a "prisoner of war" status. |
According to the legend, the | Apaches buried and hid the gold and covered up the mi |
The | Apaches came close and Boggs with the remaining miner |
Once at the top, the | Apaches cremated their dead in full view of Boggs and |
However, the | Apaches defeated the Spanish.There followed a brief p |
1700's Lipan | Apaches discover Cascade Caverns. |
tween September and November 1943 flying A-36 | Apaches during the Italian Campaign. |
a co-production between the Spanish companies | Apaches Entertainment and Telecinco Cinema. |
He interpreted “La Complainte des | Apaches” for the TV series Les Brigades du Tigre, wri |
Mangas Coloradas, Chief of the Gila River | Apaches, fought Confederate soldiers throughout Arizo |
, one of these US air operations, executed by | Apaches from the 11th Aviation Regiment became a fias |
deserted until they reappeared and drove the | Apaches from the ridge but by that time army surgeon |
Caught off guard, the | Apaches hastily picked up their shot fellow warriors |
Within about a decade the | Apaches he met in Kansas were gone, pushed south by a |
cap rocks were to be used to advantage by the | Apaches in 1880. |
He led several expeditions against the | Apaches in the company of Kit Carson and from 1859 - |
1879, he was directing operations against the | Apaches in southeastern Arizona accompanying an exped |
5, where they gained fame flying their AH-64A | Apaches in an experimental two-tone grey scheme in su |
In 1882, when a party of | Apaches including Geronimo pressured Loco to leave fo |
an in the U.S. cavalry, which has enfrentarce | Apaches Indians. |
in Scott (unfinished) 1853 gathering of Lipan | Apaches, interpreters, soldiers and settlers. |
The movies Old Shatterhand ( | Apaches Last Battle) and "Winnetou und sein Freund Ol |
9. Old Shatterhand ( | Apaches Last Battle) (1964), dir.: Hugo Fregonese |
t a combined band of Chiricahua and Mescalero | Apaches led by Chief Victorio. |
Two years later when marauding | Apaches led by Chief Mangus Durango hold up just out |
Two groups of | Apaches, less than thirty in total, rendezvoused in t |
And by 1664, the | Apaches of the Great Plains were trading captives fro |
as Committee, agent of the Utes and Jicarilla | Apaches of Northern Mexico and a friend of Abraham Li |
When the Americans were inside the | Apaches opened fire with their rifles and bows so the |
d an unknown number of Mexican men, drove the | Apaches out of town and then fought off the Apaches a |
For football, the | Apaches participate in the state's AAAA classificatio |
the Apache people and authored Life Among the | Apaches, published in 1869. |
The | Apaches retreated to the west without loss; the Ameri |
The | Apaches retreated to their usual strongholds in north |
owever, he decided to start a war against the | Apaches, so now, he could not attend the governor's o |
Apaches, Spaniards, Mexicans, and Americans have all | |
The | Apaches succeeded in capturing a large number of live |
Like the | Apaches, they were mobile and extremely independent, |
He led the | Apaches to national basketball championships in 1949 |
inds Vic using a smoke signal to call for the | Apaches to come for their rifles. |
d, Sieber was told to move Yavapais and Tonto | Apaches to the San Carlos Reservation in the middle o |
l by Captain Reuben Bernard, and followed the | Apaches to the Chiricahua Mountains stronghold of Coc |
ptain Enoch Steen during an encounter between | Apaches under Mangas Coloradas and Steen's detachment |
he repaired field from 30 August, flying A-36 | Apaches until moving north into eastern France in Oct |
ther battle between the California Column and | Apaches was fought near Stein's Peak in Doubtful Cany |
The | Apaches were fighting in defense of Mexico with their |
Two of the | Apaches were killed immediately and dropped to the gr |
Around 100 | Apaches were defeated by fifty-four men of the 5th In |
ck from Cochise's warriors, during which five | Apaches were killed. |
The | Apaches were repulsed and ultimately retreated, suffe |
Indians successfully drove off a band of 300 | Apaches which had surrounded the presidio. |
way but is attacked and killed by the band of | Apaches who paid for the rifles. |
Casualties are unknown, except for the | Apaches who suffered at least five men killed by Pull |
the Mescalero Sands, named for the Mescalero | Apaches who once hunted in these sandhills. |
the leader of a nearby Apache tribe, and the | Apaches will stop at nothing to get him back. |
owed by two defeats at the hands of Mescalero | Apaches within ten days of the Florida Mountains batt |
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