grenade sous marine - meaning and definition. What is grenade sous marine
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What (who) is grenade sous marine - definition

PIANO SUITE BY CLAUDE DEBUSSY
Pagodes; Soirée dans Grenade; Jardins sous la pluie; Soiree dans Grenade
  • Debussy in 1905

hand grenade         
  • Incendiary grenade
  • An [[infantry]]man throwing an [[Mk 2 grenade]] during training, 1942
  • page=300}}</ref>
  • Grenade on a [[kepi]] of the [[French Army]]
  • One of the earliest modern hand grenades. Fielded in the British Army from 1908, it was unsuccessful in the trenches of [[World War I]], and was replaced by the [[Mills bomb]].
  • Seven ceramic hand grenades of the 17th Century found in [[Ingolstadt]] Germany
  • Inert training grenade made from hard rubber
  • A cross-section of a [[Ketchum Grenade]], used during the [[American Civil War]]
  • National Historical Museum]], [[Athens]], Greece)
  • [[M84 stun grenade]] (1995–present)
  • [[M61 grenade]] (1959-1968) with a safety clip around the lever and the bent tip of the safety pin at top
  • 218x218px
  • An illustration of a fragmentation bomb known as the 'divine bone dissolving fire oil bomb' (''lan gu huo you shen pao'') from the ''[[Huolongjing]]''. The black dots represent iron pellets.
  • Mk3A2]] concussion grenade
  • Mongolian grenade attack on Japanese during [[Yuan dynasty]]
  • trench]]es from 1915.
  • Hand grenade fuze system
  • cotter pin]] with a ring attached
  • Cross section of the Model 24 ''[[Stielhandgranate]]''
  • Demonstration of a German ''[[stielhandgranate]]'' (shaft hand grenade), a high explosive grenade with time fuze, [[Netherlands]], 1946
  • Grenade immediately after being thrown at a practice range. The safety lever has separated in mid-air from the body of the grenade.
  • Hand grenade converted to booby trap with pull trip wire trigger
  • HEAT]] grenade
SMALL BOMB THAT CAN BE THROWN BY HAND
Hand grenades; Fragmentation grenade; Frag grenade; Gas grenade; Grenades; Concussion grenade; Frag Grenade; Light bomb; Concussion Grenade; Handgrenade; Hand-grenade; Grenade, France; HE Grenade; Incendiary grenade; Sting grenade; Stinger grenade; Fragmentation Grenades; Concussion Grenades; Stiel Grenade; Stick grenades; Fragmentation Grenade; Stick grenade; Hand gernade; Hand grenads; F-1 Antipersonnel Grenade; Hand Grenade; Grenado; Flaming grenade; Fragmentation grenades; Flying squirrel grenade; Impact detonation grenade; Bomba a Mano; Stingball grenade; Offensive grenade; Defensive grenade; Hand-grenade throwing; Hand grenade; Stick hand grenade; Firing lever
¦ noun a hand-thrown grenade.
grenade         
  • Incendiary grenade
  • An [[infantry]]man throwing an [[Mk 2 grenade]] during training, 1942
  • page=300}}</ref>
  • Grenade on a [[kepi]] of the [[French Army]]
  • One of the earliest modern hand grenades. Fielded in the British Army from 1908, it was unsuccessful in the trenches of [[World War I]], and was replaced by the [[Mills bomb]].
  • Seven ceramic hand grenades of the 17th Century found in [[Ingolstadt]] Germany
  • Inert training grenade made from hard rubber
  • A cross-section of a [[Ketchum Grenade]], used during the [[American Civil War]]
  • National Historical Museum]], [[Athens]], Greece)
  • [[M84 stun grenade]] (1995–present)
  • [[M61 grenade]] (1959-1968) with a safety clip around the lever and the bent tip of the safety pin at top
  • 218x218px
  • An illustration of a fragmentation bomb known as the 'divine bone dissolving fire oil bomb' (''lan gu huo you shen pao'') from the ''[[Huolongjing]]''. The black dots represent iron pellets.
  • Mk3A2]] concussion grenade
  • Mongolian grenade attack on Japanese during [[Yuan dynasty]]
  • trench]]es from 1915.
  • Hand grenade fuze system
  • cotter pin]] with a ring attached
  • Cross section of the Model 24 ''[[Stielhandgranate]]''
  • Demonstration of a German ''[[stielhandgranate]]'' (shaft hand grenade), a high explosive grenade with time fuze, [[Netherlands]], 1946
  • Grenade immediately after being thrown at a practice range. The safety lever has separated in mid-air from the body of the grenade.
  • Hand grenade converted to booby trap with pull trip wire trigger
  • HEAT]] grenade
SMALL BOMB THAT CAN BE THROWN BY HAND
Hand grenades; Fragmentation grenade; Frag grenade; Gas grenade; Grenades; Concussion grenade; Frag Grenade; Light bomb; Concussion Grenade; Handgrenade; Hand-grenade; Grenade, France; HE Grenade; Incendiary grenade; Sting grenade; Stinger grenade; Fragmentation Grenades; Concussion Grenades; Stiel Grenade; Stick grenades; Fragmentation Grenade; Stick grenade; Hand gernade; Hand grenads; F-1 Antipersonnel Grenade; Hand Grenade; Grenado; Flaming grenade; Fragmentation grenades; Flying squirrel grenade; Impact detonation grenade; Bomba a Mano; Stingball grenade; Offensive grenade; Defensive grenade; Hand-grenade throwing; Hand grenade; Stick hand grenade; Firing lever
[gr?'ne?d]
¦ noun
1. a small bomb thrown by hand or launched mechanically.
2. a glass receptacle containing chemicals which are released on impact, used for testing drains and extinguishing fires.
Origin
C16 (in the sense 'pomegranate', which the bomb supposedly resembled in shape): from Fr., alt. of OFr. (pome) grenate (see pomegranate), on the pattern of Sp. granada.
hand grenade         
  • Incendiary grenade
  • An [[infantry]]man throwing an [[Mk 2 grenade]] during training, 1942
  • page=300}}</ref>
  • Grenade on a [[kepi]] of the [[French Army]]
  • One of the earliest modern hand grenades. Fielded in the British Army from 1908, it was unsuccessful in the trenches of [[World War I]], and was replaced by the [[Mills bomb]].
  • Seven ceramic hand grenades of the 17th Century found in [[Ingolstadt]] Germany
  • Inert training grenade made from hard rubber
  • A cross-section of a [[Ketchum Grenade]], used during the [[American Civil War]]
  • National Historical Museum]], [[Athens]], Greece)
  • [[M84 stun grenade]] (1995–present)
  • [[M61 grenade]] (1959-1968) with a safety clip around the lever and the bent tip of the safety pin at top
  • 218x218px
  • An illustration of a fragmentation bomb known as the 'divine bone dissolving fire oil bomb' (''lan gu huo you shen pao'') from the ''[[Huolongjing]]''. The black dots represent iron pellets.
  • Mk3A2]] concussion grenade
  • Mongolian grenade attack on Japanese during [[Yuan dynasty]]
  • trench]]es from 1915.
  • Hand grenade fuze system
  • cotter pin]] with a ring attached
  • Cross section of the Model 24 ''[[Stielhandgranate]]''
  • Demonstration of a German ''[[stielhandgranate]]'' (shaft hand grenade), a high explosive grenade with time fuze, [[Netherlands]], 1946
  • Grenade immediately after being thrown at a practice range. The safety lever has separated in mid-air from the body of the grenade.
  • Hand grenade converted to booby trap with pull trip wire trigger
  • HEAT]] grenade
SMALL BOMB THAT CAN BE THROWN BY HAND
Hand grenades; Fragmentation grenade; Frag grenade; Gas grenade; Grenades; Concussion grenade; Frag Grenade; Light bomb; Concussion Grenade; Handgrenade; Hand-grenade; Grenade, France; HE Grenade; Incendiary grenade; Sting grenade; Stinger grenade; Fragmentation Grenades; Concussion Grenades; Stiel Grenade; Stick grenades; Fragmentation Grenade; Stick grenade; Hand gernade; Hand grenads; F-1 Antipersonnel Grenade; Hand Grenade; Grenado; Flaming grenade; Fragmentation grenades; Flying squirrel grenade; Impact detonation grenade; Bomba a Mano; Stingball grenade; Offensive grenade; Defensive grenade; Hand-grenade throwing; Hand grenade; Stick hand grenade; Firing lever
(hand grenades)
A hand grenade is the same as a grenade
.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Estampes

Estampes ("Prints"), L.100, is a composition for solo piano by Claude Debussy. It was finished in 1903. The first performance of the work was given by Ricardo Viñes at the Société Nationale de Musique in Paris. This three-movement piano suite is impressionistic.