「munitions」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

munitions

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該当件数:364件

  • echnique makes handling and transporting the munitions a great deal simpler.
  • He advised the Ministry of Munitions about industrial chemical matters, particula
  • nd machine gun department of the Ministry of Munitions after 1918.
  • ectively organized the Bavarian army and its munitions after it had suffered considerable losses.
  • sortie and released several precision-guided munitions against electronic warfare sites near Misrat
  • delivered 179,000 pounds of precision guided munitions against military targets over the course of
  • tests and evaluates the newest air-to-ground munitions, air-to-air missiles, electronic warfare sys
  • ll air launched and ground based air defence munitions, also involved taking the UK-lead for Insens
  • o Britain in 1915 to help at the Ministry of Munitions, Amos continued to work in Egypt until the e
  • was a deputy controller in the Department of Munitions and Supplies.
  • Some were converted into improvised munitions and modified to carry explosive warheads.
  • s Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Munitions and Supply.
  • established state-owned factories to produce munitions and materials that could not be produced by
  • that year, he was posted to the Ministry of Munitions and then in the Territorial Army in 1916.
  • American Expeditionary Force reinforcements, munitions, and supplies.
  • ng 4,000 prisoners and stores of weapons and munitions, and preventing Wrangel from seizing that ye
  • rmy Depot (BGAD) is a U.S. Army conventional munitions and chemical weapon storage facility located
  • ition (high explosive, dual-purpose improved munitions and rocket assisted HE projectiles) and 147
  • ca on the one hand, and the unending flow of munitions and weapons from European arms dealers on th
  • erman businesses, primarily in construction, munitions, and textile manufacturing.
  • Scimitar, but being beaten back by exploding munitions and heat.
  • holds, and came with massive reinforcements, munitions and money.
  • ikely to be encountered, except in of legacy munitions and unexploded ordnance.
  • 80,000 bbls, adding capacity for 300 tons of munitions and improving underway replenishment capabil
  • The Department of Munitions and Supply was the federal government minist
  • to interfere with Russian troop movements or munitions and also had to grant Russia decreased tarif
  • rrying and transferring at sea the latest in munitions and guided missiles, Haleakala spent the fir
  • nned the manufacturing plants which produced munitions and material during World War II.
  • orts of entry (for replacement of armaments, munitions and war material permitted the two South Vie
  • She was carrying munitions and supplies as part of the Allies' World Wa
  • redirect the economy into the production of munitions and food necessary for the war, as well as t
  • ted with the production of or trade in arms, munitions and war material; such measures shall not ad
  • n Republic' under Japanese sponsorship, with munitions and finance to be supplied by Tokyo.... he s
  • During World War I, he was Minister for Munitions and after the war, he served in cabinet for
  • was once a civil servant in the Ministry of Munitions and served as head of the Priorities Divisio
  • He joined federal Department of Munitions and Supply in 1940 and later became chief of
  • of rockets, IED-making materials, small arms munitions and dozens of anti-tank weapons.
  • During this period, she carried messages, munitions, and supplies and gathered intelligence of C
  • records show that Levett was also producing munitions and weaponry at a site close by the Tower of
  • nd used the proceeds to fund the purchase of munitions and military equipment.
  • War it was used to dump military equipment, munitions and weaponry left behind by the ousted Germa
  • s built after the Second World War, to carry munitions and the new guided missiles.
  • to be used against flammable targets such as munitions and fuel depots, parking lots, aircraft and
  • th the local population, gathered armaments, munitions and money, and developed plans to attack ins
  • With the fall of the town a huge stocks of munitions and more than 1,500 Royalist soldiers were l
  • ence Decatur Howe, under whose Department of Munitions and Supply the company fell, decided to keep
  • k that included engineers and technicians at munitions and aviation plants in the New York area.
  • ited in the area were supplied with arms and munitions, and Federal troops trained and drilled unti
  • the explosives department of the Ministry of Munitions, and gained first-hand knowledge of modern m
  • ip did not appear, Subercase, running low on munitions and provisions, lifted the siege and returne
  • Supply munitions and equipment for a British-trained army
  • Tunnels were dug out to house munitions and ordnance.
  • 10, 1861 and transferred to Fayetteville as munitions and equipment were moved to the Fayetteville
  • It was created by the Munitions and Supply Act in September 1939 and began o
  • hnology center for illuminating and infrared munitions and is also the only place in the Northern H
  • aven and to prevent the movement of weapons, munitions and insurgent activity into Baghdad.
  • nsuring the supply of nitrates (used to make munitions), and it authorized the construction of two
  • Munitions and arms could be delivered from the west vi
  • Insensitive munitions are munitions that are chemically stable eno
  • Arms and munitions are often flown in on the same planes which
  • Destruction of most of the stored munitions around Anniston has proceeded without incide
  • urbishes smoke, riot control, and incendiary munitions, as well as chemical/biological defense oper
  • ed for the storage of conventional explosive munitions as well as assembled chemical weapons.
  • and 1919 when he served with the Ministry of Munitions as Director-General of Contracts, Head of th
  • ivilian ship that is believed to be carrying munitions as well as civilian passengers.
  • Quartermaster-General in 1956, Controller of Munitions at the Ministry of Supply in 1957 and Master
  • oved to be particularly useful in underwater munitions because the aluminium component had the effe
  • o, with the objective of preventing arms and munitions being transported from Albania into Kosovo,
  • The Imperial Munitions Board (IMB) was a national agency, set up in
  • rmed on December 15, 1916, when the Imperial Munitions Board bought the Curtiss (Canada) aircraft o
  • orld War I, Rhea served on the United States Munitions Board.
  • rawn from active service and assigned to the Munitions Branch, making explosives in Britain.. Follo
  • World War II, the rail industry gave way to munitions building.
  • ied concrete command post, observation post, munitions bunker and gun emplacements still remain alo
  • car factory given over to the production of munitions but in 1919 car production recommenced risin
  • erved the country well in the manufacture of munitions, but they also built engines, both steam and
  • Germany have banned the transfer of cluster munitions, but ships registered in Britain have shippe
  • adian Division Ammunition Column, delivering munitions by mule.
  • weapon development, in part because standard munitions can be adapted to carry the agents.
  • a Senior NCO in the aircraft maintenance or munitions career fields directly involved with setting
  • ightning off the coast of Guam, igniting her munitions cargo and destroying the ship.
  • Routine dumping of British munitions carried on until 1974.
  • to the flaming seas surrounding the stricken munitions carrier and helping to rescue many of her cr
  • ed claim that the use of depleted uranium in munitions causes cancers, birth defects and other path
  • mmunition Operations was renamed Letterkenny Munitions Center with command and control transferred
  • ning the maintenance workload from Red River Munitions Center, which is closing under Base Realignm
  • n function of the newly established Anniston Munitions Center.
  • e of the Confederacy's last major supply and munitions centers.
  • ng World War II, Stadtallendorf was a secret munitions centre.
  • bacco in exchange for foreign goods, such as munitions, clothing and foodstuffs.
  • Corps munitions columns and trains
  • Roosevelt approved the shipment of chemical munitions containing mustard agent to the Mediterranea
  • processed while multiple kinds of individual munitions containing several agents were destroyed ear
  • airman of the Commonwealth Advisory Panel on Munitions Contracts from 1939 to 1940, and was persona
  • Independence enables Anthony Bacon to obtain munitions contracts for his ironworks.
  • of the Military Affairs Committee to secure munitions contracts during the Second World War.
  • n, New York businessmen who sought lucrative munitions contracts then being awarded by the U.S. Gov
  • MP, is disqualified from holding government munitions contracts.)
  • en July and September, the theatre total for munitions deployed by British Harriers on planned oper
  • nned destruction of the port, he blew up the munitions depot where the Germans had stored 4,000 fus
  • Banister was implicated in a 1961 raid on a munitions depot in Houma, Louisiana, "...in which vari
  • a two-year school on the grounds of a former munitions depot before becoming a four-year school in
  • The M4 motorway and RAF Welford, a munitions depot used by the United States Air Force, a
  • ount Vernon Arsenal was a United States Army munitions depot, located on the Mobile River three mil
  • rld War II, the hero runs frantically to the munitions depot, calling Daisy's name, only to find a
  • the fire of 25 January 1899, at the American munitions depot.
  • towards the town of Siedlce, a major Russian munitions depot.
  • e early part of the 20th century and later a munitions depot.
  • ), Sensor Fuzed Weapon (SFW), Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser (WCMD), Advanced Medium Range Air-
  • British HB876 mines in an SUU-64/B Tactical Munitions Dispenser (TMD).
  • (JACADS) was the U.S. Army's first chemical munitions disposal facility.
  • for military oriented storage facilities and munitions dumps.
  • Commissary General of Munitions during the American Revolutionary War, Lewis
  • tanley and Laughton Goodwin but grew to make munitions during World War I and entered the car build
  • Griswold pistol factory to make pistols and munitions during the Civil War upon the call of Georgi
  • He served with the Ministry of Munitions during World War I, and became secretary of
  • r its production of Parrott rifles and other munitions during the Civil War, although it also manuf
  • d Altalena in the midst of exploding onboard munitions during heavy machine gun exchange with Hagan
  • ach was also the only US site hit by foreign munitions during World War I, although these shells we
  • It was also used to transport munitions during WWII.
  • Munitions employed the use of some fine human hair.
  • regarded as obsolete, so any hexanite-filled munitions encountered will be in the form of unexplode
  • Generally, any Minol-filled munitions encountered will be in the form of legacy mu
  • ng the Southern Rhodesian commission and the Munitions Enquiry Tribunal.
  • he rear to open into a personnel entry and a munitions entry, with an underground barracks and a ma
  • s) of mustard agent in approximately 780,000 munitions, equivalent to about seven percent of the or
  • The defenders, running short of food and munitions, eventually abandoned the fort but were able
  • For example, he proposes that munitions expenditures would be far higher than projec
  • was an important businessman, ship owner and munitions expert.
  • would be partially blinded in an accidental munitions explosion during World War II.
  • plied Cryptography" book under the rules for munitions export, it was illegal to export the source
  • t, largest or the most deadly explosion at a munitions facility in Britain of the war: an explosion
  • ly travelling over to England to work in the munitions factories during World War I.
  • ers buried the dead, dug trenches, worked in munitions factories and cleaned up the shells, grenade
  • da until, depleted by assignments to work in munitions factories, the orchestra closed down on Sept
  • ey, food and an escape from forced labour in munitions factories.
  • war, choosing starvation over employment in munitions factories.
  • camp for Soviet POWs, located in the former munitions factory "Pocisk"[bullet].
  • The blast occurred at a munitions factory that was manufacturing explosives fo
  • the site; militants took over another nearby munitions factory in Khanfar.
  • World War broke out, and Sugden worked in a munitions factory in Keighley making shells for the Ro
  • e construction of a dam for the needs of the munitions factory in Sestroretsk, a part of the river
  • r II she initially became a wages clerk in a munitions factory at ROF Glascoed between Pontypool an
  • In the First World War a munitions factory was built on the site, where cylinde
  • Silvertown TNT explosion at the Brunner-Mond munitions factory in what has become known as the Silv
  • er in World War I and had to go to work in a munitions factory to help her family get by.
  • a massive TNT explosion at the Brunner-Mond munitions factory in what is known as the Silvertown e
  • After serving in a munitions factory during that war, Tom Sturgis continu
  • ham Light Railway which connected the Kynoch munitions factory with the London, Tilbury and Southen
  • nown as the Green River Arsenal, was a large munitions factory complex between Dixon and Amboy in L
  • sked to work in the United Kingdom's biggest munitions factory at Ardeer in Ayrshire.
  • d and Barbour families, who grow their small munitions factory into a great international corporati
  • Steele later worked in a munitions factory in near Burton-upon-Trent.
  • The title, which is an Australian term for a munitions factory, can be seen as a way to describe th
  • ster Rising of 1916, Liberty Hall acted as a munitions factory, wherein bombs and bayonets were mad
  • 0 whilst working as an unskilled worker in a munitions factory, began displaying signs of schizophr
  • game to work at the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich, munitions factory.
  • er job with a baker and worked in a Woolwich munitions factory.
  • opened on the Up side of the line to serve a munitions factory.
  • o-called Small Ghetto for the Hugo Schneider munitions factory.
  • reached two truck loads of gelignite in the munitions factory.
  • Munitions Factory: Provides specialist weaponry for ve
  • 9. Chemical Munitions Field Operations: Field deployable scientist
  • portrayal of waves, torpedo trajectories and munitions fire.
  • net explosive weight (NEW), of a shipment of munitions, fireworks or similar products is the total
  • ic aircraft, forming bridges or shields, and munitions flowing along assembly lines.)
  • legheny Arsenal, where she worked assembling munitions for the Union Army.
  • he bunkers were built in the 1950's to house munitions for the cold war.
  • loading a British steamer, the Bermuda, with munitions for the Confederate Army when United States
  • forms of monetary reward by the Ministry of Munitions for his invention including royalties of £1
  • Wilson, Victoria on 10 March with a cargo of munitions for the Royal Australian Air Force and gener
  • tsburgh on December 21, 1814, with a load of munitions for General Andrew Jackson to defend New Orl
  • o the United States to arrange the supply of munitions for the British armed forces.
  • were to contain rations to last 45 days and munitions for 60 days and fortified like Tobruk was in
  • I, again, many iron and steel works produced munitions for the war effort, not only munitions but s
  • From 1940 ROF Glascoed which produced munitions for the armed services was served by the lin
  • leon's force, with large quantities of food, munitions, forage, weapons, clothing and ammunition, a
  • sal to solicit contributions to buy arms and munitions from Japan.
  • d clear unexploded mines and other dangerous munitions from the field.
  • liotes had procured considerable supplies of munitions from French ships.
  • d in the seizure and confiscation of British munitions from Fort William and Mary.
  • m October 1940 to June 1941 and Minister for Munitions from October 1940 to the defeat of the Menzi
  • e, and a small tramway was used to transport munitions from the bay platform to the firing ranges.
  • a factory which produced high explosives for munitions from 1941 until its closure in 2008.
  • d clear unexploded mines and other dangerous munitions from the field.
  • ian Navy to resupply ships at sea with food, munitions, fuel and spare parts.
  • The spare parts, oil, munitions, gasoline, repair tools were shipped by fast
  • ot (RNAD) Gosport, latterly retitled Defence Munitions Gosport.
  • Originally the munitions had to be carted to the train station in Mil
  • He said that the munitions had been inspected on several occasions and
  • The munitions had been captured by the Confederates when t
  • ed along the Kaluga road and replenished his munitions, he forced Napoleon into retreat in the Batt
  • 1877 to 1882 and recognized as an expert in munitions, he was appointed to the War Ministry in 189
  • as a staging post for the transport of men, munitions, horses and equipment from Salisbury Plain w
  • It was in war service loaded with munitions in the Huskisson Dock, Liverpool when it was
  • He was appointed Minister for Munitions in Ben Chifley's November 1946 ministry.
  • ed him to the unpaid position of director of munitions in Scotland in July 1915, he joined the Air
  • He was posted to the Ministry of Munitions in 1916 and then became Commander 15th Corps
  • s attempted to hold a raffle for weapons and munitions in a county facility.
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