wastage$91203$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το wastage$91203$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι wastage$91203$ - ορισμός

AIRBORNE INFANTRY DIVISION OF THE BRITISH ARMY DURING WWII
British 1st Airborne; 1st British Airborne Division; British 1st Airborne Division; 1st Airbourne Division (United Kingdom); Operation Wastage; Operation Reinforcement; Operation Wild Oats; Operation Beneficiary; Operation Lucky Strike; Operation Sword Hilt; Operation Transfigure; Operation Axehead; Operation Linnet; Operation Infaturate
  • folding airborne bicycle]] in the foreground
  • 200px
  • 1st Airlanding Light Regiment, Royal Artillery]] in action in Italy, where their initial deployment was by sea instead of by air.
  • British paratroopers training in England, June 1941
  • 156th Parachute Battalion]] in [[Oosterbeek]], where the majority of 1st Airborne Division became trapped
  • Pegasus 1st Airborne beret
  • Men of 'C' Company returning from the successful Bruneval Raid
  • A wounded man being carried away from the Divisional Administration Area by stretcher (note the stocks of ammunition and fuel dumped in the background) at Oosterbeek, September 1944.
  • 1st Airborne soldiers use parachutes to signal to Allied supply aircraft from the grounds of 1st Airborne Division's HQ at the Hartenstein Hotel in Oosterbeek, Arnhem, 23 September 1944.
  • Southern Command]], 21 May 1942. With him is Major-General Frederick Browning, GOC of the 1st Airborne Division.
  • Major General [[Roy Urquhart]] outside the divisional headquarters in [[Arnhem]], September 1944.

Wastage (military)         
FORMER BRITISH TERM USED DURING THE FIRST WORLD WAR
Wastage was a British term used during the First World War. The term adapted Carl von Clausewitz's concept of 'Verbrauch' which, akin to wastage, also means the consumption of losses in terms of men, materials, and territories.
wastage         
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¦ noun
1. the action or process of wasting.
an amount wasted.
2. (also natural wastage) Brit. the reduction in the size of a workforce as a result of voluntary resignation or retirement rather than enforced redundancy.
the number of people leaving a job or further educational establishment before they have completed their training or education.
wastage         
REDIRECT PAGE
1.
Wastage of something is the act of wasting it or the amount of it that is wasted.
...a series of measures to prevent the wastage of water...
There was a lot of wastage and many wrong decisions were hastily taken.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
Wastage is the process by which part of someone's body gets weaker or smaller because they are very ill or have not eaten enough.
This can lead to bodily weakness and muscle wastage.
N-UNCOUNT
3.
Wastage refers to the number of people who leave a company, college, or other organization, especially before they have completed their education or training. (BRIT)
British universities have very little wastage and their graduates are good...
N-UNCOUNT

Βικιπαίδεια

1st Airborne Division (United Kingdom)

The 1st Airborne Division was an airborne infantry division of the British Army during the Second World War. The division was formed in late 1941 during the Second World War, after the British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, demanded an airborne force, and was initially under command of Major-General Frederick A. M. Browning. The division was one of two airborne divisions raised by the British Army during the war, with the other being the 6th Airborne Division, created in May 1943, using former units of the 1st Airborne Division.

The division's first two missions—Operation Biting, a parachute landing in France, and Operation Freshman, a glider mission in Norway—were both raids. Part of the division was sent to North Africa at the end of 1942, where it fought in the Tunisian Campaign, and when the Allies invaded Sicily in July 1943, the division undertook two brigade sized landings. The first, Operation Ladbroke, carried out by glider infantry of the 1st Airlanding Brigade and the second, Operation Fustian, by the 1st Parachute Brigade, were far from completely successful. The 1st Airborne Division then took part in a mostly diversionary amphibious landing, codenamed Operation Slapstick, as part of the Allied invasion of Italy in September 1943.

In December, most of the 1st Airborne Division (minus the 2nd Parachute Brigade) returned to England, and began training and preparing for the Allied invasion of Normandy. It was not involved in the Normandy landings in June 1944, being held in reserve. In September 1944 the 1st Airborne took part in Operation Market Garden. The division, with the Polish 1st Parachute Brigade temporarily attached, landed 60 miles (97 km) behind German lines, to capture crossings on the River Rhine, and fought in the Battle of Arnhem. After failing to achieve its objectives, the division was surrounded and took very heavy casualties, but held out for nine days before the survivors were evacuated.

The remnants of the 1st Airborne Division was returned to England soon after. The division never fully recovered from their losses at Arnhem and the 4th Parachute Brigade was disbanded. Just after the end of the war in Europe, the depleted formation took part in Operation Doomsday in Norway in May 1945. They were tasked with the disarmament and repatriation of the German occupation army. The 1st Airborne Division then returned to England and was disbanded in November 1945.