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单词 battleship
释义

battleship


bat·tle·ship

B0118900 (băt′l-shĭp′)n. Any of a class of very large warships, heavily armored and armed with numerous large-caliber guns. Also called battlewagon.
[Short for line-of-battle ship.]

battleship

(ˈbætəlˌʃɪp) or

battlewagon

n1. (Military) a heavily armoured warship of the largest type having many large-calibre guns2. (Military) (formerly) a warship of sufficient size and armament to take her place in the line of battle; ship of the line

bat•tle•ship

(ˈbæt lˌʃɪp)

n. any of a class of warships that are heavily armored and are equipped with powerful armaments. [1785–95]
Thesaurus
Noun1.battleship - large and heavily armoured warshipbattleship - large and heavily armoured warship battlewagondreadnaught, dreadnought - battleship that has big guns all of the same caliberpocket battleship - a small battleship built to conform with treaty limitations on tonnage and armament (from 1925 to 1930)combat ship, war vessel, warship - a government ship that is available for waging war

battleship

noun warship, gunboat, man-of-war, ship of the line, capital ship the rumble of a great battleship going down the slipway
Translations
战舰

battle

(ˈbӕtl) noun a fight between opposing armies or individuals. the last battle of the war. 戰役 战役 verb to fight. 戰鬥 战斗ˈbattlefield noun the place where a battle is, or was, fought. dead bodies covered the battlefield. 戰場 战场ˈbattleship noun a heavily armed and armoured warship. 戰艦 战舰

battleship

战舰zhCN

battleship


battleship

A very large foot or shoe. Typically used in the plural. I bet that store doesn't have shoes big enough for your battleships!

enough (something) to sink a (battle)ship

Referring to a very large quantity of something. Over the years, we've accumulated enough Christmas decorations to sink a ship. Where are we going to put them all?See also: enough, sink

enough to sink a ship

Also, enough to sink a battleship. A more than sufficient amount, as in They brought enough food to sink a ship. [Colloquial; mid-1900s] See also: enough, ship, sink

gunboats

and battleships n. big feet; big shoes. Get those battleships off my sofa! Hasn’t he got the biggest gunboats you ever saw? See also: gunboat

battleships

verbSee gunboatsSee also: battleship

battleship


battleship,

large, armored warship equipped with the heaviest naval guns. The evolution of the battleship, from the ironclad warship of the mid-19th cent., received great impetus from the Civil War. By 1872 the French were building iron and steel warships, and in 1876 the British started construction of two all-steel war vessels. Developments continued to improve speed, fortification, accuracy of armament, and size. The H.M.S. Dreadnought, which was completed in 1906, was the first modern battleship and introduced the "all-big-gun" class of warship. It was armed with ten 12-in. (30.5-cm) guns and was powered by steam turbines, which developed a speed of 21 knots. The battleship became the major capital unit in modern navies, although there was only one fleet engagement of battleships in World War I and no fleet engagements in World War II. However, with the development of new aerial tactics, such as dive bombing, and the introduction (1941) of aircraft carriers as the major unit of a naval attack force, battleships became nearly obsolete. The fate of the battleship as a major weapon in modern warfare was sealed on Dec. 7, 1941, when Japanese carrier-borne aircraft attacked the U.S. navy's battleships at Pearl Harbor, sinking or badly damaging all eight. Shortly after the Korean War the last battleships of the British and American navies were decommissioned. The U.S. navy, during part of the Vietnam War, used one battleship, the New Jersey, for shore bombardment and antiaircraft defense. The four Iowa-class battleships were recommissioned in 1980s; all were again decommissioned by 1992.

Bibliography

See S. Breyer, Battleships and Battle Cruisers, 1905–1970 (tr. 1973) and Battleships of the World (1980).

Battleship

 

(1) Ship of the line, or line-of-battle ship, in the sailing fleet of the 17th to mid-19th centuries; large, three-masted warships with two and three gun decks. They had from 60 to 135 guns mounted in lines along the sides and crews of up to 800 men. They fought in a wake column (battle line), which is how they received the name, which, by tradition, was passed on to ships of the steam-powered navy.

(2) Battleship in the steam-powered armored navy, one of the basic classes of the largest surface artillery ships, designed to destroy ships of all classes in battle at sea and to deliver powerful artillery strikes against targets on shore.

Battleships appeared in many of the world’s navies to supplant early forms of armor-clad ships after the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05. At first they were called dreadnoughts. In Russia this class of battleship was established in 1907. Battleships were used in World War I. By the start of World War II battleships had a standard displacement of 20,000–64,000 tons and were armed with up to 12 turret guns of the main caliber (280–460 mm), up to 20 torpedo-defense, antiaircraft, or multipurpose artillery guns with calibers of 100–127 mm, and up to 80–140 small-caliber automatic antiaircraft cannon and large-caliber antiaircraft machine guns. The traveling speed of the battleships was 20–35 knots (37–64.8 km/hr) and wartime crews included 1,500–2,800 men. The side armor was up to 440 mm thick, and the weight of all the armor was up to 40 percent of the total weight of the ship. Battleships had one to three aircraft on board and catapaults for launching them. During the war, because of the increased role of naval aviation (especially carrier-based) and submarine forces and the loss of many battleships to aviation and submarines, these ships lost their importance. After the war all navies scrapped almost all their battleships.

B. F. BALEV

battleship

[′bad·əl‚ship] (naval architecture) One of a class of heaviest and most extensively armed and armored vessels, with at least 10-inch (25-centimeter) armor plating and guns of 12-inch (30-centimeter) or larger caliber.
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battleship


  • noun

Synonyms for battleship

noun warship

Synonyms

  • warship
  • gunboat
  • man-of-war
  • ship of the line
  • capital ship

Synonyms for battleship

noun large and heavily armoured warship

Synonyms

  • battlewagon

Related Words

  • dreadnaught
  • dreadnought
  • pocket battleship
  • combat ship
  • war vessel
  • warship
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更新时间:2024/11/11 18:15:02