Use "royal navy" in a sentence

1. The attack killed 19 Royal Australian Navy and two Royal Navy sailors, and wounded another 10.

2. HMS Conqueror, various British Royal Navy ships; Conqueror-class monitor, a Royal Navy ship class; USS Conqueror (AMc-70), a US Navy coastal

3. That provoked outrage from parts of the Royal Navy.

4. He portrays an officer in the Khmer Royal Navy.

5. The Royal Navy put the Corsair into carrier operations immediately.

6. In 1906, the Royal Navy owned the field with Dreadnought.

7. HMS Dreadnought was a Royal Navy battleship that revolutionised naval power.

8. In 1906, the British Royal Navy launched the revolutionary HMS Dreadnought.

9. Six ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Wizard.

10. He recommended that she be taken back into the Royal Navy.

11. For a number of years she served as the flagship of the Royal Malaysian Navy after joining Rahmat as the two major assets of the Royal Malaysian Navy.

12. The saltpetre we stole had already been sold to the Royal Navy.

13. The peacetime reorganisation of the Royal Navy assigned Royal Oak to the Second Battle Squadron of the Atlantic Fleet.

14. On 23 October 1940, Wickes was turned over to the Royal Navy.

15. And the blue crosses are the Royal Navy ships, um, preparing to engage.

16. Royal Navy casualties were 2 dead, Captain Rowland Money and 18 seamen wounded.

17. She was the last traditional survey ship to serve in the Royal Navy.

18. The British Royal Navy bombarded the town of Kagoshima and destroyed several ships.

19. She was the last cruiser serving with the Royal Navy upon her decommissioning.

20. KD Hang Tuah is a frigate operated by the Royal Malaysian Navy since 1977.

21. The Culverin class was a class of destroyers used by the Royal Manticoran Navy

22. The ship was designed by Edward James Reed, Chief Constructor to the Royal Navy.

23. Then they proceeded to western Korean waters, where other Royal Navy warships were converging.

24. After the ship arrived in Invergordon, Baden was carefully examined by Royal Navy technicians.

25. She was launched on 29 April 1911 by Princess Louise, The Princess Royal, and commissioned into the Royal Navy on 14 November 1912.

26. HMS Ambuscade was a British Royal Navy destroyer which served in the Second World War

27. HTMS Krabi (OPV-551) is an offshore patrol vessel (OPV) of the Royal Thai Navy.

28. The final Royal Navy variant was the FAW.22 powered by the Ghost 105 engine.

29. Their second son the Hon. George Henry Douglas became an Admiral in the Royal Navy.

30. 1941 – World War II: The German submarine U-110 is captured by the Royal Navy.

31. The Aristocracy continued to dominate the government, the Army and Royal Navy, and high society.

32. She served the Royal Navy from 1981 to 2005, taking part in the Falklands War.

33. An aircrew flying badge (unofficially and incorrectly known as an aircrew Brevet – which is actually French for a diploma or certificate) is the badge worn on the left breast, above any medal ribbons, by qualified aircrew in the Royal Air Force, Royal Navy, British Army, Indian Air Force, Pakistan Air Force, Royal Canadian Air Force, Royal Australian Navy, Australian Army, Royal Australian

34. HMS Atheling (D51) was a Royal Navy Ruler-class escort carrier of the Second World War

35. The destruction of Hood spurred a relentless pursuit by the Royal Navy involving dozens of warships.

36. New Zealand depended on Britain's Royal Navy for its military security during the 1920s and 1930s.

37. The term "battleship" was officially adopted by the Royal Navy in the re-classification of 1892.

38. HMS Atheling (D51) was a Royal Navy Ruler-class escort carrier of the Second World War

39. The terms were rejected and the Royal Navy opened fire on the French ships berthed there.

40. Biter A name given to a series of warships of the Royal Navy beginning in 1797

41. The Royal Navy retired the last of its Tigerfish torpedoes from active service in February 2004.

42. Three days later, on 9 September 1940, Welles was decommissioned and turned over to the Royal Navy.

43. She next sailed to Port Royal, Nova Scotia, for patrols with ships of the Royal Navy, then sailed for the British West Indies in January 1942.

44. Bounty ' s complement was 46 men, comprising 44 Royal Navy seamen (including Bligh) and two civilian botanists

45. Their adversary, the Royal Navy, rated them as battlecruisers though after the war classified them as battleships.

46. 31: Two Royal Navy destroyers are sunk off the Dutch coast in the so-called "Texel Disaster".

47. Gloire prompted further innovation from the Royal Navy, anxious to prevent France from gaining a technological lead.

48. Launched from October 1912 to November 1913, this was the third class of Royal Navy super-dreadnoughts.

49. Royal Canadian Air Force planes attacked other German beach defences and inland positions, while destroyers and supporting craft of the Royal Canadian Navy shelled German targets.

50. King's Wharf Bermuda is a cruise terminal located in Bermuda's west end, at the Royal Navy Dockyards

51. HMS Agamemnon was a 64-gun third-rate ship of the line of the British Royal Navy

52. While the land campaigns had contributed to saving Canada, the Royal Navy had shut down American commerce, bottled up the U.S. Navy in port, and widely suppressed privateering.

53. America “had been able to afford isolation because the Royal Navy had been her buffer against European powers.”

54. Sea Hawk Mk 50 Export variant based on the FGA 6 for the Royal Netherland Navy; 22 built.

55. She was sold to the Royal Netherlands Navy on 1 February 1946 and was renamed HNLMS Evertsen (D802).

56. There she undertook exercises with other Royal Navy ships serving in the Far East, including the battleship Anson.

57. English Royal Navy Submarine Binnacle with heavy brass plates, trim, weights, hood, base bracket, compensating ball brackets, etc

58. Major Royal Navy units included Britain's last battleship, HMS Vanguard, and four fleet and three light aircraft carriers.

59. The defeat was the first to be inflicted on the Royal Navy since the 1814 Battle of Plattsburgh.

60. Of the 171,000 sailors who served in the Royal Navy throughout the conflict, around a quarter were pressed.

61. Britain subsequently forged Alliances with both Russia and France once it became clear that Germany intended to construct a navy to match the Royal Navy in the late 1890s

62. She was seized there on 3 July by the Royal Navy as part of Operation Catapult, Winston Churchill's plan to prevent the French Navy from falling into German hands.

63. The first small steam-powered cruisers were built for the British Royal Navy with HMS Mercury launched in 1878.

64. The peninsula as a whole takes its name from Barff Point, which was named for Royal Navy Lieutenant A

65. The Blackburn Buccaneer is a British carrier-capable attack aircraft designed in the 1950s for the Royal Navy (RN)

66. HMS Cheerly (W 153) was a ‹See TfM› Favourite-class tugboat of the Royal Navy during World War II.

67. In January 1905 Salt’s journal, The Humanitarian, published an eye-witness account of a Royal Navy Birching ‘gone wrong’

68. The J, K and N class was a class of 24 destroyers of the Royal Navy launched in 1938.

69. The new Admiralty Board meets only twice a year, and the day-to-day running of the Royal Navy is controlled by a Navy Board (not to be confused with the historic Navy Board described later in this article).

70. This did not satisfy Winston Churchill, who ordered French ships in British ports to be seized by the Royal Navy.

71. In 1928, the Royal Navy started considering the requirements for the warships that it expected to start building in 1931.

72. The Majestics provided the model for battleship building in the Royal Navy and many other navies for years to come.

73. Rupert herself captured an Algerine warship in 1678, which was later commissioned in the Royal Navy as HMS Tiger Prize.

74. During World War II, Neptune operated with a crew drawn predominantly from the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy.

75. On 12 September, Triumph departed Sasebo, accompanied by Warramunga and the Royal Navy C-class destroyers - Charity, Cockade and Concord.

76. The Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1902 "allowed the Royal Navy to withdraw its capital ships from the Pacific by 1907.

77. The Sea Otter was used by both the RAF and the Royal Navy for air-sea rescue and patrol roles.

78. Flogging was a common punishment in the Royal Navy and came to be associated with the stereotypical hardiness of sailors.

79. Before the Royal Navy was established, the term Boatswain was applied to the expert seaman on an English merchant vessel

80. HMS Attacker (D02) was an American-built escort carrier that served with the Royal Navy during the Second World War.