Eilat bay - meaning and definition. What is Eilat bay
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What (who) is Eilat bay - definition

1944 W AND Z-CLASS DESTROYER
INS Eilat (1944); INS Eilat (1955); INS Eilat (K-40)
  • Torpedo tubes from INS ''Eilat''
  • INS ''Eilat''
  • Monument to the Fallen of INS Eilat, Haifa. Sculptor: Igael Tumarkin

HMS Zealous (R39)         
HMS Zealous was a Z-class destroyer of the Royal Navy built in 1944 by Cammell Laird. She served during the Second World War, participating in operations in the North Sea and off the Norwegian coast, before taking part in some of the Arctic convoys.
Bay (horse)         
  • A partially body-clipped horse, showing the two-toned red hair shaft.
  • The horses of the [[New South Wales Mounted Police]] show some of the typical variations in the bay color.
HAIR COAT COLOR OF HORSES
Bay (colour); Bay horse; Bay (color); Blood bay; Bay (coat colour); Bay (coat); Dark bay
Bay is a hair coat color of horses, characterized by a reddish-brown or brown body color with a black point coloration of the mane, tail, ear edges, and lower legs. Bay is one of the most common coat colors in many horse breeds.
bay leaf         
  • Bay laurel leaves (''Laurus nobilis'')
  • Indian bay leaf ''[[Cinnamomum tamala]]''
  • Indonesian bay leaf ''[[Syzygium polyanthum]]''
AROMATIC LEAF OF LAURUS NOBILIS
Bay leaves; Bay-leaf; Bay Leaves; Bay (plant); Bay Leaf; Bay leave; Laurel leaf
(bay leaves)
A bay leaf is a leaf of an evergreen tree that can be dried and used as a herb in cooking.
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Wikipedia

HMS Zealous (R39)

HMS Zealous was a Z-class destroyer of the Royal Navy built in 1944 by Cammell Laird. She served during the Second World War, participating in operations in the North Sea and off the Norwegian coast, before taking part in some of the Arctic convoys. She spent a further ten years in Royal Navy service after the end of the war, before being sold to the Israeli Navy, which operated her as INS Eilat. She saw action during the Suez Crisis in 1956, attacking Egyptian ships and was still active by the outbreak of the Six-Day War in 1967. She was sunk several months after the conflict by missiles launched from several small Egyptian missile boats; this made her the first vessel to be sunk by a missile boat in wartime. It was an important milestone in naval surface warfare, which aroused considerable interest around the world in the development of small manoeuvrable missile boats.