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Definition of capital ship in English: capital shipnoun A large warship such as a battleship or aircraft carrier. 主力舰 Example sentencesExamples - When surface combat began in August 1942, American heavy cruisers had to do the work of battleships against Japanese capital ships.
- The British were able to repair their damaged ships faster than the Germans, so after the battle Jellicoe still had more capital ships than his enemy.
- Bases on which U.S. military power relies, and perhaps even the capital ships that enforce presence, are exposed to unprecedented dangers.
- Much slower to accelerate than fighters or gunboats, capital ships rely on their powerful shield arcs, point defense networks, and fighter cover for protection.
- They are likely to include previous monarchs, members of the Royal Family, Formidable, Inflexible, Indefatigable, Ark Royal, Hermes, Indomitable, Eagle, and other typical aircraft carrier and capital ship names.
- These cannons have different weapons load outs than the ones used aboard capital ships and gunboats because they are the primary weapons.
- If the Americans lost a capital ship (a battleship or aircraft carrier) it was simply a loss.
- Almost from the time the echo of the guns in the North Sea faded, naval strategy shifted to things radically different from decisive battles between capital ships.
- The admirals kept hoping for a major clash of capital ships instead of submarine warfare.
- The Germans lost 2 capital ships (1 battleship and 1 battlecruiser), 3 cruisers, 5 destroyers, and 2,115 dead.
- Every battle that unfolds plays out differently as small ships swarm the furious capital ships, as frigates lend supports to gunships, and heavy carriers churn out more fodder for the battle.
- In the Second World War carriers replaced battleships as the capital ships of modern navies because aircraft could perform the functions of naval guns more effectively.
- At the root of the problem, these critics argue, was an increasingly irrational devotion to the capital ship (a term that encompasses both the battleship and the battle cruiser).
- For the cost of one frigate, the Remorhaz Navy would have three capital ships off of the line for a month.
- The two capital ships fell victim to Japanese bombers on December 10 1941, taking 840 men to the bottom off Malaysia.
- The raid on Alexandria - the battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth was even more severely damaged than Valiant - wiped out the Royal Navy's capital ships in the Eastern Mediterranean at a stroke.
- As the weary Russians headed east, the Japanese, by contrast, had a growing fleet of modern capital ships, funded by Chinese reparation money and in many cases ordered from British shipyards.
- In 1939 the battleship, the capital ship, still laid credible claim to being the primary naval striking unit.
- Finally, a naval convention was signed in which the nine powers agreed not to build capital ships (warships over 10,000 tons, with guns larger than 8-inch) for ten years.
- Lisan yelled out in surprise as she pointed at the large capital ship and three gunboats sitting behind the first three cruisers.
Definition of capital ship in US English: capital shipnounˈkapədl SHip A large warship such as a battleship or aircraft carrier. 主力舰 Example sentencesExamples - If the Americans lost a capital ship (a battleship or aircraft carrier) it was simply a loss.
- As the weary Russians headed east, the Japanese, by contrast, had a growing fleet of modern capital ships, funded by Chinese reparation money and in many cases ordered from British shipyards.
- Almost from the time the echo of the guns in the North Sea faded, naval strategy shifted to things radically different from decisive battles between capital ships.
- When surface combat began in August 1942, American heavy cruisers had to do the work of battleships against Japanese capital ships.
- The admirals kept hoping for a major clash of capital ships instead of submarine warfare.
- The two capital ships fell victim to Japanese bombers on December 10 1941, taking 840 men to the bottom off Malaysia.
- Bases on which U.S. military power relies, and perhaps even the capital ships that enforce presence, are exposed to unprecedented dangers.
- The raid on Alexandria - the battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth was even more severely damaged than Valiant - wiped out the Royal Navy's capital ships in the Eastern Mediterranean at a stroke.
- The Germans lost 2 capital ships (1 battleship and 1 battlecruiser), 3 cruisers, 5 destroyers, and 2,115 dead.
- At the root of the problem, these critics argue, was an increasingly irrational devotion to the capital ship (a term that encompasses both the battleship and the battle cruiser).
- Every battle that unfolds plays out differently as small ships swarm the furious capital ships, as frigates lend supports to gunships, and heavy carriers churn out more fodder for the battle.
- These cannons have different weapons load outs than the ones used aboard capital ships and gunboats because they are the primary weapons.
- For the cost of one frigate, the Remorhaz Navy would have three capital ships off of the line for a month.
- The British were able to repair their damaged ships faster than the Germans, so after the battle Jellicoe still had more capital ships than his enemy.
- Lisan yelled out in surprise as she pointed at the large capital ship and three gunboats sitting behind the first three cruisers.
- In the Second World War carriers replaced battleships as the capital ships of modern navies because aircraft could perform the functions of naval guns more effectively.
- In 1939 the battleship, the capital ship, still laid credible claim to being the primary naval striking unit.
- Finally, a naval convention was signed in which the nine powers agreed not to build capital ships (warships over 10,000 tons, with guns larger than 8-inch) for ten years.
- They are likely to include previous monarchs, members of the Royal Family, Formidable, Inflexible, Indefatigable, Ark Royal, Hermes, Indomitable, Eagle, and other typical aircraft carrier and capital ship names.
- Much slower to accelerate than fighters or gunboats, capital ships rely on their powerful shield arcs, point defense networks, and fighter cover for protection.
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