Crossword clues for submarines
Wiktionary
Wikipedia
"Submarines" is a poem written by Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936), and set to music by the English composer Edward Elgar in 1917, as the third of a set of four war-related songs on nautical subjects for which he chose the title " The Fringes of the Fleet".
Like the others in the cycle, is intended for four baritone voices. It was originally written with orchestral accompaniment, but it was later published to be sung with piano accompaniment.
The composer does not make clear which sections of the song, if any, are to be sung solo or in chorus.
The poem was titled by Kipling Tin Fish.
"Submarines" is a song by American folk rock band The Lumineers. It impacted modern rock radio in the United States as the third single from their debut studio album The Lumineers (2012).
Usage examples of "submarines".
Soviet ballistic-missile submarines that could wipe out every major city in the western United States, perhaps their own homes?
Once aboard the submarines, they would deliver their message directly to the commanding officers.
Chief of Naval Operations, his DCNO for Undersea Warfare, the Director of Naval Nuclear Propulsion, and the Commander of Submarines, Pacific, were together, they desperately needed as much privacy as possible.
The towed array was a series of highly sophisticated listening devices implanted in a long rubber tube and towed well behind the Trident submarines to provide long-range warning of approaching danger.
There are no surface ships in our vicinity, but there are two submarines nearby, one only two hours away.
Even though his entire career had been aboard submarines, he walked with the exaggerated swagger of a surface sailor.
Man had yet to achieve absolute silence with submarines, but he was damn close.
The men you worked with in submarines were his kind of people, even if a lot of them were no longer interested in advanced degrees.
Americans are aware of any problem with their missile submarines at this time, if that is in fact why their senior admirals have suddenly disappeared from under our noses.
He especially enjoyed the SEALs who came aboard his submarines, although their stays were short.
It was mind expanding and harmless and Buck Nelson found that he was gaining an improved understanding of himself in relation to the submarines he loved so much.
Both submarines had apparently been exactly where intelligence said they would be, and the most brilliant ruse of the century was undoubtedly successful.
Washington to learn how their ballistic-missile submarines were being located and sunk had been shot down.
He saw submarines as machines that either functioned perfectly or sank.
In high school, in the Academy, even the first few years in submarines, he was always part of a group that did everything as a unit and succeeded because of that fact.