Search for crossword answers and clues
Member of the U.S.N.
Answer for the clue "Member of the U.S.N. ", 10 letters:
submariner
Alternative clues for the word submariner
Word definitions for submariner in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Submariner may refer to: A sailor who is a crew member of a submarine A baseball pitcher who pitches with an underhand motion Namor the Sub-Mariner, a comic-book character in the Marvel Comics Universe Rolex Submariner , a Rolex diving watch model Submariner ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A member of the crew of a submarine. 2 (context US baseball English) A pitcher that throws with an underhand motion.
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a member of the crew of a submarine
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ A trained, fit submariner , possibly with breathing apparatus, might do it. ▪ Besides, she was married, and married to a submariner . ▪ David Percy-Griffiths, Gilston, Herts Yes, but it is the submariners that pong. ▪ For a submariner ...
Usage examples of submariner.
Then they would have no choice but to be submariners until the boats surfaced off their homeport, if they ever returned.
They went to the commanding officer responsible for making submariners out of their young officers.
For some reason which she later realized was absolutely irrational, she trusted the submariners much more than the men ashore.
CNO and the three most senior submariners in the Navy gathered in one room.
They also had never considered how it would affect submariners who thought the world above them was at war.
He quickly began distributing his men: four submariners and one SEAL were to enter through the flooded forward torpedo compartment and close the vents and valves left open by the Martha Anns divers.
A visual sighting by antisubmarine warfare aircraft is one of the nightmares all submariners share.
The service was secretive about both alarming deficiencies, but the submariners themselves all knew about the unreliable magnetic exploders of the Mark Fourteen torpedo, and about the captains who either had to be beached for overcaution or, on the Branch Hoban pattern, fell apart under attack, Aces like Captain Aster who combined cold courage with skill and luck in battle were few.