Wiktionary
n. (plural of torpedo boat English)
Usage examples of "torpedo boats".
To attempt to do so would only bring the pirate submarine closer to the French coast, and there were in all probability several torpedo boats at St.
Navy Torpedo Boat, and their torpedo boats couldn't be confused with anything afloat.
There was just time enough for the torpedo boats to reach the maximum safe speed.
American torpedo boats hurtle out of this reeking fog, their fat hulls barely touching the water, their giant motors curving white scars into the sea as they line up their targets: the few remaining ships in Goto Dengo's troop convoy, whose decks are now covered with a dark mat of soldiers, like moss on an old rock.
She warned of attacks on convoys bound for Malta on the fourteenth and fifteenth of June, detailing the individual losses to air attack, torpedo boats, and surface raiders.
Over 128 feet long and displacing 215 tons, the Osa was a larger version of the American patrol torpedo boats of WWII.
Davids were small steam torpedo boats that were trimmed to run with just their funnels and hatches above water, and armed with a spar torpedo.
The LCSs carried no assault troops but hovered about the forces while landing, their machine guns and other weapons prepared to fight off torpedo boats or to match fire with machine guns or small weapons opposing the landing from (he shore.
I have the destroyer squadrons ready to go after any fixed emplacements we find in GEO, and the torpedo boats are tasked with high-delta-vee intercepts on anything fleeing—.
MacArthur grunted as the torpedo boats began to churn up a lot of water.
The Jaffa still sailed, and missiles could hit torpedo boats and patrol craft as well.
Gauthier, after he was discovered to have forgotten to send torpedo boats into the ChanÂ.
First he told him to contact Navy Lieutenant Johnny Buckley and have him consider their chances of getting through the Japanese blockade in Buckley's remaining patrol torpedo boats, then tied up in battered con tion at a fishing wharf in Sisiman Bay, on the Bataan Peninsula.
The whole time he looked out through puckered eyes over the open sea in the direction of the harbor mouth buoy, but neither inbound freighters, nor outbound cutters, nor a formation of torpedo boats could divert him.
As well as this massive fighting strength, there were dozens of smaller vessels, many cargo ships, carrying land 'clads and infantry, gunboats and torpedo boats - virtually all the remaining fighting ships of the nations of the world which had taken part in the war.