Use "luftwaffe" in a sentence

1. Luftwaffe at War; Blitzkrieg in the West.

2. 21: The Luftwaffe strikes heavily at Moscow.

3. You have to rebuild the Luftwaffe from scratch.

4. The Luftwaffe planned to station the type with Reconnaissance Wing 51.

5. Two Luftwaffe officers in blue leather coats were standing beside it.

6. During the war, the Luftwaffe impressed them as military transports.

7. Luftwaffe at War; Blitzkrieg in the West: Volume 2.

8. Luftwaffe Messerschmitt Bf 109s intercepted them, with fatal results.

9. There were military Adjutants such as Von Below Hitler’s Luftwaffe Adjutant

10. The training organisation of the Luftwaffe was failing to replace losses.

11. 20: The Luftwaffe and German U-boats start mining the Thames estuary.

12. The Luftwaffe was assured air superiority over the Low Countries.

13. There is no mention of U-boats or the Luftwaffe.

14. It was only awarded 28 times, with the majority going to Luftwaffe pilots.

15. This included the Heer (army), Kriegsmarine (navy), and the Luftwaffe (air force).

16. 6: More British fighter planes are delivered to Malta; Luftwaffe attacks continue.

17. The Germans kept claiming that Luftwaffe was attacking only military targets.

18. Czechoslovakian Air Force Germany Luftwaffe operated one captured aircraft. Netherlands KLM operated two aircraft.

19. Several new German formations were also added, such as Waffen SS and Luftwaffe Field Divisions.

20. This was just an absurd excuse for the failures of the Luftwaffe in the east.

21. In the euphoric atmosphere of perceived victory, the Luftwaffe leadership became increasingly disconnected from reality.

22. The accompanying update package 1.41 introduces an additional three new factions, USMC, RAF, and Luftwaffe.

23. Enduring concentrated German artillery fire and Luftwaffe strafing and bombs, the French stood their ground.

24. The Luftwaffe consistently varied its tactics in its attempts to break through the RAF defences.

25. He had been made the scapegoat for all the failures of the Luftwaffe.

26. The last game was against a Luftwaffe teamwhich lost to Dynamo 5 - 2 .

27. We dumped all the junk the Luftwaffe keeps stuffing into these poor beasts.

28. For a while, I thought the German Luftwaffe had shot him down, reindeer, sleigh and all.

29. The Gotha Go 244 was a transport aircraft used by the Luftwaffe during World War II.

30. The Luftwaffe attacked bombing the Kanavinsky Bridge and the Fair, but the Kremlin's air defense defended these objects.

31. Its glory days came when Spitfire and Hurricane pilots scrambled to defeat Hitler's Luftwaffe despite overwhelming odds.

32. 13: The Luftwaffe strikes with a large force at Glasgow and the shipping industry along the River Clyde.

33. The Luftwaffe believed it was weakening Fighter Command at three times the actual attrition rate.

34. A total of 75 RCAF Sabre 5s were transferred to the German Luftwaffe during 1957.

35. The circular BMW logo was a representation of the spinning propeller of a Bavarian Luftwaffe.

36. All the Luftwaffe crews who've ended up in Ireland have been put in prison camps.

37. The task force was under heavy air attack by the Luftwaffe all day and was withdrawn that evening.

38. 5 Its glory days came when Spitfire and Hurricane pilots scrambled to defeat Hitler's Luftwaffe despite overwhelming odds.

39. At sunset on 29 January the Luftwaffe began a glide bomb attack on the ships in Anzio Bay.

40. The Luftwaffe, on the other hand, were able to muster a larger number (1,450) of more experienced fighter pilots.

41. Luftwaffe ground forces are light combat troops also capable of constructing simple defenses and AA weapons.

42. Due to the failure of the Luftwaffe to establish air supremacy, a conference assembled on 14 September at Hitler's headquarters.

43. Walter Horten was a military man who had lost hundreds of Luftwaffe colleagues during the Battle of Britain in 19

44. The Heinkel He 177 Greif (Griffin) was a long-range heavy bomber flown by the Luftwaffe during World War II.

45. The Luftwaffe had given priority to attacking the French 7th Army's spearhead into the Netherlands as it threatened the Moerdijk bridgehead.

46. As it lifted from the Luftwaffe fighter base outside Berlin, Schellenberg undid his seat belt and reached for his briefcase.

47. The Luftwaffe lost approximately 60 aircraft shot down over Yugoslavia, costing the lives of at least 70 aircrew.

48. 23 It shows a steely-eyed fighter pilot climbing into his Spitfire to do battle against the Luftwaffe.

49. New, long-range fighters could now destroy German Luftwaffe planes on the ground, making the skies even safer for the Allies.

50. Following this grinding battle, exhaustion and the weather reduced operations for most of a week, allowing the Luftwaffe to review their performance.

51. Albert Kesselring (30 November 1885 – 16 July 1960) was a German Generalfeldmarschall of the Luftwaffe during World War II.

52. The first is that Luftwaffe defences became better, too, and that caused a high price to be paid in terms of casualties.

53. The Bücker Bü 131 "Jungmann" (Young man) was a German 1930s basic training aircraft which was used by the Luftwaffe during World War II.

54. On 27 May, the Luftwaffe bombed the resulting traffic jam thoroughly for two hours, destroying or immobilising about 80 percent of the vehicles.

55. While Allied Air Forces were tied to the support of the Army, the Luftwaffe deployed its resources in a more general, operational way.

56. The 9th AAF's fighters, P-47 Thunderbolts and P-51 Mustangs, roared and dived at German strong points unhindered by Luftwaffe [German Air Force] interference.

57. Arthur was sent to Germany where he was trained in advanced fighter tactics by the German Luftwaffe at its Fighter School at Bie Munich .

58. The Luftwaffe began to abandon their morning raids, with attacks on London starting late in the afternoon for fifty-seven consecutive nights.

59. April 10 – The Luftwaffe flies its final sortie over the United Kingdom, a reconnaissance mission from Norway by an Arado Ar 234.

60. Last year we were reminded of those epic days when Fighter Command denied the Luftwaffe air superiority in the skies over Britain.

61. After the bombing of Guernica in 1937 and the Rotterdam Blitz in 1940, it was commonly assumed that terror bombing was a part of Luftwaffe doctrine.

62. Luftwaffe Camouflages 2 is a set of 8 acrylic paints essential for painting the authentic colours used by the German Air Force during the World War Two.

63. But the Luftwaffe... built primarily to clear a path for ground forces... proved no match for the royal Air Force... built for war in the air.

64. The battle for France had cost the Luftwaffe 28 percent of its front line strength, some 1,236–1,428 aircraft were destroyed (1,129 to enemy action, 299 in accidents).

65. Later in World War II, the Luftwaffe experimented with the Messerschmitt Me 328 as a parasite fighter, but problems with its pulsejet engines could not be overcome.

66. Do 24T-1 French production, 48 built Do 24T-1 Dutch production for the Luftwaffe powered by three BMW Bramo 323R-2 engines, 159 built (including T-2 and T-3).

67. Saint Christopher, Christopher •Chaffer, gaffer, Jaffa, kafir, Staffa •alfalfa, alpha, Balfour, Wadi Halfa •camphor, chamfer •Luftwaffe •laugher, staffer •heifer, zephy… asseveration , as·sev·er·a·tion / əˌsevəˈrāshən/ • n

68. 9 The radio was full of news of freighters on the Atlantic being sunk by U-boats, and crackly transmissions from Edward R. Murrow reported on London under siege by the Luftwaffe.

69. The Dornier Do 217 was a bomber used by the German Luftwaffe during World War II as a more powerful development of the Dornier Do 17, known as the Fliegender Bleistift (German: "flying pencil").

70. 406, 409 and 410) became operational in the autumn of 1941, Beau-Fighters equipped with airborne interception radar (AI) were already in use and the night blitz of the Luftwaffe had been checked.

71. On February 24, 1943, three squadrons of B-24 Liberators—goliath, four-engine, 56,000-pound Bombers—streaked toward Germany to strike Hitler’s vaunted Luftwaffe at its heart, targeting a key production facility in the town of Gotha, Germany.

72. Big Ben, which is operated by the Palace of Westminster, survived attacks by German Luftwaffe bombers during World War II, continuing to mark the time to within 1 1/2 seconds of Greenwich Mean Time.

73. Having its most-common usage as such, ignores massive evidence to the contrary. As branch-of-service identification, Wehrmacht vehicles had an alpha-numeric identity license plate reading WH for the Heer, WL for the Luftwaffe, and WM for the Kriegsmarine, plus, SS for the "Waffen-SS".

74. The Bombsight is a weapon seen in Call of Duty 2: Big Red One.It is exclusive to the level "Liberators".After "Stretch" Roger eliminates many Luftwaffe planes, the player is tasked by the pilot to bomb two German tanker ships

75. The American historians Williamson Murray and Alan Millet wrote that it was Manstein's message to Hitler on 24 November advising him that the 6th Army should not break out, along with Göring's statements that the Luftwaffe could supply Stalingrad that "... sealed the fate of the Sixth Army."

76. Beginning in 1942, to compensate for its lack of heavy bombers, the Luftwaffe started to experiment with packing some of its war-weary Junkers Ju 88 bombers with enormous shaped-charge warheads and guiding them to their targets with a fighter airplane mounted on the back of the unmanned bomber.

77. Operation Bodenplatte (Baseplate), launched on 1 January 1945, was an attempt by the Luftwaffe to cripple Allied air forces in the Low Countries during the Second World War.The goal of Bodenplatte was to gain air superiority during the stagnant stage of the Battle of the Bulge so that the German Army and Waffen-SS forces could resume their advance

78. Operation Cockade was a series of deception operations designed to alleviate German pressure on Allied operations in Sicily and on the Soviets on the Eastern Front by feinting various attacks into Western Europe during World War II.The Allies hoped to use Cockade to force the Luftwaffe into a massive air battle with the Royal Air Force and U.S

79. Chaff, originally called Window by the British and Düppel by the Second World War era German Luftwaffe (from the Berlin suburb where it was first developed), is a radar Countermeasure in which aircraft or other targets spread a cloud of small, thin pieces of aluminium, metallized glass fibre or plastic, which either appears as a cluster of primary targets on radar screens or swamps the screen