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Royal Navy stronghold during W.W. II
Answer for the clue "Royal Navy stronghold during W.W. II ", 9 letters:
gibraltar
Alternative clues for the word gibraltar
Word definitions for gibraltar in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Gibraltar \Gi*bral"tar\, n. A strongly fortified town on the south coast of Spain, held by the British since 1704; hence, an impregnable stronghold. A kind of candy sweetmeat, or a piece of it; -- called, in full, Gibraltar rock .
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Gibraltar (previously known as the Hugh Rodney Sharp Mansion ), located at 2505 Pennsylvania Avenue in Wilmington, Delaware , is a country estate home dating from c. 1844 that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places . It takes its name from ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1590s, ancient Calpe , captured 710 C.E. by Saracen leader Tariq, renamed Jebel el Tarik "the Mountain of Tarik," hence the English name. A British possession since 1704. Figurative of impregnability by 1856.
Usage examples of gibraltar.
Tell him, at the same time, that I did not know the alcaide of Gibraltar was so vigilant in collecting his tolls.
Alexandria, Bengasi, Tripoli, Tunis and Algiers, passed the Rock of Gibraltar and turned north up the coast of Portugal.
After that the next sight of land would be the towering rocky mass of Europa Point, the southern end of Gibraltar, with Blackstrap Bay to the north of it on the Mediterranean side, and the rounded hills of Africa across the Strait.
Landford had ordered Dane to transport Sir Henry to Gibraltar, a duty better suited to the sloop Bluefin or one of the frigates, not a lumbering two-decker.
A rocky head like Gibraltar, a cold-bloodedlooking grey town, straggling up a steep hillside, a few coniferae, a great many grey junks, a few steamers and vessels of foreign rig at anchor, a number of sampans riding the rough water easily, seen in flashes between gusts of rain and spin-drift, were all I saw, but somehow it all pleased me from its breezy, northern look.
Bordeaux, San Sebastian, La Coruna, Lisbon, and finally through the Strait of Gibraltar.
A hundred tons of high explosive would hardly dent the Rock of Gibraltar, but I could take out a dragline with two five-pound charges of wrap-around explosive placed where the boom is hinged to the machine house.
From the top of the pass beyond the lakes there is a grand view of the volcano in all its nakedness, with its lava beds and fields of pumice, with the lakes of Onuma, Konuma, and Ginsainoma, lying in the forests at its feet, and from the top of another hill there is a remarkable view of windy Hakodate, with its headland looking like Gibraltar.
On the way from Ronda to Gibraltar are a number of villages whose Arab names are startling even in this land of Ishmaelitish memories.
So little did the Moors understand the position of things abroad, that at one time they made war upon Gibraltar, while expressing the warmest friendship for England, who then possessed it.
He was definitely caught between a rock and a hard place---a rock about the size of Gibraltar and a hard place about like Mount Rainier, and no space to move at that.
That with the Mediterranean was somewhat neglected, as the government relied more on the friendship of the piratical Algerines than on the solid possession of Gibraltar and Minorca.
Strait of Gibraltar, and that raised the spirits of all the troupers and all but the mossiest shellbacks among the crew.
Four, her sense of identity and her desires, or her skandhas, or whatever you want to call them, are as firm as the Rock of Gibraltar.
Singular Terms, each denoting a single thing, the most obvious are Proper Names, such as Gibraltar or George Washington, which are merely marks of individual things or persons, and may form no part of the common language of a country.