naval law - translation to italian
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naval law - translation to italian

MARITIME FLAG USED BY WARSHIPS IN ADDITION TO THE ENSIGN
Naval jack; Naval Jack
  • ''Sankt Peterburg'']] displaying the Russian naval jack at the bow and the naval ensign at the stern
  • [[Royal Netherlands Navy]] jack
  • [[Union Jack of Sweden and Norway]] flown by Swedish armored cruiser ''Wasa'' in 1903
  • Dutch naval jack onboard HNLMS ''Tjerk Hiddes''
  • Naval jack of the [[Irish Naval Service]]
  • 6}}'s jackstaff in December 2011
  • Norwegian gunboat ''Sleipner'' at [[Kiel]], June 1895, flying the [[Union Jack of Norway and Sweden]]

naval law      
legge navale
combat vessel         
  • D33}} in 2012
  • AVP-39}} until 1958.
  • longest naval vessel]] ever built, near [[Portsmouth]], [[England]] in 2004
  • United States Navy and [[Philippine Navy]] vessels in the [[Sulu Sea]] in 2005
WATERCRAFT DESIGNED TO CONDUCT OR SUPPORT COMBAT OPERATIONS AT SEA
Naval vessel; Boat crew; Naval ships; Types of Modern Navel Ships; Naval Vessels; Navy ships; Naval vessels; Combat vessel; Military vessel; Military ship; Naval boat; Military boat; Naval warship
nave da combattimento, barca da combattimento
naval base         
SUBURB OF PERTH, WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Naval Base
base navale (parte dell"esercito che procura servizi di unità praticanti nei combattimenti navali)

Definition

Mariotte's law
·- ·see Boyle's law, under Law.

Wikipedia

Jack (flag)

A jack is a flag flown from a short jackstaff at the bow (front) of a vessel, while the ensign is flown on the stern (rear). Jacks on bowsprits or foremasts appeared in the 17th century. A country may have different jacks for different purposes, especially when (as in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands) the naval jack is forbidden to other vessels. The United Kingdom has an official civil jack; the Netherlands has several unofficial ones. In some countries, ships of other government institutions may fly the naval jack, e.g. the ships of the United States Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the case of the US jack. Certain organs of the UK's government have their own departmental jacks. Commercial or pleasure craft may fly the flag of an administrative division (state, province, land) or municipality at the bow. Merchant ships may fly a house flag. Yachts may fly a club burgee or officer's flag or the owner's private signal at the bow. Practice may be regulated by law, custom, or personal judgment.

Examples of use of naval law
1. The secret documents released last year revealed that five months after Crabb‘s death, WH Lewin, head of Naval Law, wrote in a memo: "If this came out ... it would not seem to square very well with our statement that Crabb had been out of the Navy for over a year at the time of his death." The official Admiralty line following the incident on April 1' was that Crabb had been "specially employed in connection with trials of certain underwater apparatus" and was missing, presumed drowned.