Wiktionary
n. (alternative spelling of theater of war English)
WordNet
n. the entire land, sea, and air area that may become or is directly involved in war operations [syn: theater of war]
Wikipedia
Theatre of War is an original novel written by Justin Richards and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Seventh Doctor, Ace and Bernice. It also introduces the recurring character of Irving Braxiatel. A prelude to the novel, also penned by Richards, appeared in Doctor Who Magazine #212.
Theatre of War is a real-time tactical strategy game centering on the decisive battles in the European Theatre of World War II 1939–1945. The game allows the player to control armed forces of France, Germany, Poland, The USSR, United Kingdom or the United States (combined in actual campaign) in over 40 missions. Players will command a special task force composed of different kinds of units, including tanks, APCs, field guns, mortars, various infantry regiments and will also have an opportunity to call for artillery and air support. With a focus on unit detail and combat realism, would-be generals are faced with authentic battle scenarios, taken straight from actual World War II records and maps.
The game was developed by 1C Company and released for purchase via the Internet on April 19, 2007. It received two sequels, Theatre of War 2 and Theatre of War 3.
Theatre of War or Theater of War may refer to:
- Theater (warfare), a military term for an area where an armed conflict takes place
- Theater War, a war between Denmark-Norway and Sweden in 1788-1789
- Theater of War (album), a 2001 music album by the band Jacob's Dream
- Theater of War (film), a 2008 documentary film by director John Walter
- Theatre of War (Doctor Who), a 1994 Doctor Who novel by Justin Richards
- Theatre of War (Three-Sixty), a 1992 computer game by Three-Sixty Pacific
- Theatre of War (video game), a 2007 computer game by 1C Company
- War of the Theatres, a rivalry between playwrights Ben Johnson, John Marston, and Thomas Dekker from 1599 to 1602
Usage examples of "theatre of war".
The new Emperor continued to have strong views, amounting almost to an element of his well-known piety, about taking newly married men to a theatre of war if there were options and alternatives.
He had been afforded some degree of protection amidst the Eldershe Crescent theatre of war by his parents' indulgence of their wee yin and by the fact that they and his siblings regarded him as having nothing to do with their battles, a cross between a neutral state and a defenceless refugee.
Every single problem concerning any theatre of war, or possible theatre of war, or redistribution of forces, or creation of new bases, or undertakings to the N.
But would these allies reach the theatre of war in time to be of avail to Helium?
At the beginning of the year the tribunes of the plebs made no move until Camillus left for operations against the Faliscans, the theatre of war assigned to him.
A Danish nurse, she was carried by fate from one hospital to another in the European theatre of war and was not always sure quite where she was.