Examples of use of V-1
1. They watched the twinkling lights of German V–1 missiles draw close.
2. They learned how to endure the Third Reich‘s V–1 rockets and to thwart many Irish Republican Army bombs.
3. Inspired by tiddlywinks, players flick coloured ‘V–1 rockets‘ into a game board boasting targets of the Fuhrer and his cronies.
4. For three months in the summer of 1'44, London had been hit by a barrage of "doodlebugs", the petrol–driven V–1 flying bombs that lifted–off from sites in northern France and, when the engine stopped, fell to the ground and exploded with deadly effect.
5. Mk.VC Spitfire, built in England in 1'40. –– Curtiss Wright P–40C Tomahawk, built in the U.S. in 1'41. –– Nakajima Ki–43–1b Hayabusa, built in Japan in 1'42. –– Polikarpov U–2/PO–2, built in Russia in 1'44. –– North American Aviation P–51D Mustang, built in the U.S. in 1'45. –– Fieseler Fi–156–C2 Storch, built in Germany in 1'43. –– Fieseler Fi–103/V–1 "Buzz Bomb," built in Germany in 1'45. –– Fieseler Fi–103R Reichenburg, built in Germany in 1'44. –– Grumman F6F–5 Hellcat, built in the U.S. in 1'45. –– Republic P–47D Thunderbolt, built in the U.S. in 1'45. –– Boeing B–17E "Flying Fortress," built in the U.S. in 1'42; in restoration, with some parts of plane being shown. –– Nakajima A6M5 Model 52 Zero–Sen, built in Japan in 1'44, on display in unrestored condition. –– Hawker Hurricane Mk.