释义 |
Definition of wardroom in English: wardroomnounˈwɔːdruːmˈwɔːdrʊm A commissioned officers' mess on board a warship. Example sentencesExamples - Besides her cabin, usually shared with another staff-member, the pursers had their own wardroom where they could relax and share the trials and tribulations of the day.
- Some years later Navy regulations were changed to permit wardroom and steerage officers to voluntarily form their own wine mess.
- It was shortly after dinner time, so the wardroom had a dozen officers still lounging after their meals.
- We looked after it in the wardroom, fed it and it gradually got its strength back.
- When she arrived in sunny Gibraltar, Caroline was greeted by HMS York's Commanding Officer, Commander Paul Porter, before she sat down to a traditional lunch in the wardroom.
- We dropped off the two other pilots, who had been in the back of the H - 46, so they could relax in the wardroom.
- At least until recently, the penalty for any officer on the P&O line caught wearing a made-up bow-tie was to buy champagne for the entire wardroom.
- While Robinson provides some historical framework to the ship's operations, the strength of the book is the insight it provides into the daily life of a destroyer wardroom during this extraordinary time.
- Later in the afternoon, he had lunch in the wardroom (officer's galley), talked to Nimitz crew members in the hangar bay and posed for pictures.
- The area proposed to be leased includes the Old Naval Academy - serving as offices and a wardroom - Anchor and Stoney Lanes, Short Row and the Block Mills.
- From the flight deck of the 4,100 tonne frigate the patient was taken to the wardroom where the ship's doctor and medics began emergency treatment including transfusions and oxygen therapy.
- Lancaster is also the home of Sunny the parrot, the Royal Navy's sole sea-going mascot, who lives in the wardroom.
- During the most recent deployment, a wardroom mess dinner was held on the flight deck, involving guests from all three services.
- The Pelican had five officers on board, and the wardroom was sufficient to serve as a conference area as well as a dining space.
- But the commodore leading the Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training exercise in Southeast Asia decided to take the Thai born reservist out of the kitchen and put him in the wardroom.
- After the war wardrooms on warships became the place where young officers learned to love their profession and upgraded their naval and general culture.
- Some of those hamburgers and pork chops get consumed in the officers' wardroom, more in the chiefs' mess.
- His views and attitudes were formed in naval wardrooms and are more usually representative of public opinion than the constipated gripings of his critics on the left.
- They stuck to the best traditions and gathered together into naval societies, organizations and wardrooms.
- This started the ball rolling and before too long the ‘Esther Williams Trophy’ had become a sought after prize between wardrooms.
Definition of wardroom in US English: wardroomnoun A commissioned officers' mess on board a warship. Example sentencesExamples - After the war wardrooms on warships became the place where young officers learned to love their profession and upgraded their naval and general culture.
- From the flight deck of the 4,100 tonne frigate the patient was taken to the wardroom where the ship's doctor and medics began emergency treatment including transfusions and oxygen therapy.
- But the commodore leading the Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training exercise in Southeast Asia decided to take the Thai born reservist out of the kitchen and put him in the wardroom.
- We looked after it in the wardroom, fed it and it gradually got its strength back.
- The Pelican had five officers on board, and the wardroom was sufficient to serve as a conference area as well as a dining space.
- This started the ball rolling and before too long the ‘Esther Williams Trophy’ had become a sought after prize between wardrooms.
- While Robinson provides some historical framework to the ship's operations, the strength of the book is the insight it provides into the daily life of a destroyer wardroom during this extraordinary time.
- They stuck to the best traditions and gathered together into naval societies, organizations and wardrooms.
- His views and attitudes were formed in naval wardrooms and are more usually representative of public opinion than the constipated gripings of his critics on the left.
- During the most recent deployment, a wardroom mess dinner was held on the flight deck, involving guests from all three services.
- Besides her cabin, usually shared with another staff-member, the pursers had their own wardroom where they could relax and share the trials and tribulations of the day.
- Some years later Navy regulations were changed to permit wardroom and steerage officers to voluntarily form their own wine mess.
- We dropped off the two other pilots, who had been in the back of the H - 46, so they could relax in the wardroom.
- Some of those hamburgers and pork chops get consumed in the officers' wardroom, more in the chiefs' mess.
- The area proposed to be leased includes the Old Naval Academy - serving as offices and a wardroom - Anchor and Stoney Lanes, Short Row and the Block Mills.
- Later in the afternoon, he had lunch in the wardroom (officer's galley), talked to Nimitz crew members in the hangar bay and posed for pictures.
- It was shortly after dinner time, so the wardroom had a dozen officers still lounging after their meals.
- Lancaster is also the home of Sunny the parrot, the Royal Navy's sole sea-going mascot, who lives in the wardroom.
- When she arrived in sunny Gibraltar, Caroline was greeted by HMS York's Commanding Officer, Commander Paul Porter, before she sat down to a traditional lunch in the wardroom.
- At least until recently, the penalty for any officer on the P&O line caught wearing a made-up bow-tie was to buy champagne for the entire wardroom.
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