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occupiers

n. (plural of occupier English)

Usage examples of "occupiers".

He couldn’t imagine an American armada catching the new occupiers asleep at the switch.

Not surprisingly, the occupiers gave what woodpulp there was to papers that would back their line a hundred percent.

The idea of using his trips over there against the occupiers struck Kenzo as delicious.

Or maybe the occupiers had just held a gun to his head and told him that doing what he needed to do would improve his chances of living to get a little grayer.

And, as long as King Stanley did exactly what Japan told him to do, the occupiers wouldn’t object if by some chance he turned out to be good, too.

Most of them revolved around trying to persuade the occupiers to be a little less savage, a little less ruthless, than they might have been otherwise.

This was punishment work, what prisoners did if the occupiers decided not to shoot them.

News that wasn’t Japanese propaganda did circulate in spite of everything the occupiers could do to stop it.

Everybody in Honolulu, locals and occupiers alike, was nervous these days.

They’d collaborated with the occupiers on their backs, but they’d done it for fun or for advantage, not because they had to.

His tolerance toward the occupiers went a long way toward keeping the lid on Utah.

The Indians can't— they're occupied, and their occupiers don't believe they pose a threat.

Han China was free of foreign occupiers, without the Emperor firing a shot.

But the vast majority of the population had regarded anyone who had anything to do with the Peep occupiers with contempt, and they hadn't been shy about making their .

The occupiers were too smart to allow any weapons production in the Endicott System.