Women"s Army Corps - translation to spanish
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

Women"s Army Corps - translation to spanish

Women Army Corps Service Medal

Women's Army Corps      
Cuerpo Militar de Mujeres (cuerpo responsable sobre las mujeres en el ejército)
army nurse         
  • Army nurses in the Philippines liberated after three years as POWs
  • World War II Army Nurse Corps recruiting poster
  • Nurses, personnel, and patients of United States Base Hospital 32 in Contrexeville, France in 1918.
  • Five American Civil War nurses at 1916 Massachusetts encampment; Helen E. Smith, Susan C. Mills, Margaret Hamilton, Mary E. Smith, and Lovisa Tyson.
  • Nurses during the American Civil War
  • St Stephen's Cathedral]].
  • 1917 Army Nurse Corps Uniform Coat
  • WWII Army Nurse LT Katherine Flynn Nolan, a veteran of the [[Battle of the Bulge]], Bastogne, Belgium (18 December 2004).
MILITARY UNIT
Army nurse; U.S. Army Nurse Corps; User:E.w.bullock/sandbox/United States Army Nurse Corps; US Army Nurses Corps; Army Nurse Corps (United States); Nurse Corps (United States Army); Chief of the Army Nurse Corps; US Army Nurse Corps; United States Army Nurse Corps in World War II; U.S. Army Nurse Corps in World War II
(n.) = enfermera militar
Ex: One of the images found in the Australian War Memorial's collection is that of heroic Australian army nurse Vivian Bullwinkel, the sole survivor of the Banka (Sumatra) massacre of World War II.
army nurse         
  • Army nurses in the Philippines liberated after three years as POWs
  • World War II Army Nurse Corps recruiting poster
  • Nurses, personnel, and patients of United States Base Hospital 32 in Contrexeville, France in 1918.
  • Five American Civil War nurses at 1916 Massachusetts encampment; Helen E. Smith, Susan C. Mills, Margaret Hamilton, Mary E. Smith, and Lovisa Tyson.
  • Nurses during the American Civil War
  • St Stephen's Cathedral]].
  • 1917 Army Nurse Corps Uniform Coat
  • WWII Army Nurse LT Katherine Flynn Nolan, a veteran of the [[Battle of the Bulge]], Bastogne, Belgium (18 December 2004).
MILITARY UNIT
Army nurse; U.S. Army Nurse Corps; User:E.w.bullock/sandbox/United States Army Nurse Corps; US Army Nurses Corps; Army Nurse Corps (United States); Nurse Corps (United States Army); Chief of the Army Nurse Corps; US Army Nurse Corps; United States Army Nurse Corps in World War II; U.S. Army Nurse Corps in World War II
Enfermera militar

Definition

BANDA S
Banda de frecuencias entre 2 y 4 GHz. Utilizado por Sistemas de Distribución MultiCanal, Multipunto (MMDS).

Wikipedia

Women's Army Corps Service Medal

The Women's Army Corps Service Medal was a military award of the United States Army which was created on July 29, 1943, by Executive Order 9365 issued by President Franklin Roosevelt. The medal was intended to recognize the service of women to the Army during the Second World War. The profile featured on the medal is that of the goddess Pallas Athena; the same profile was used for the Women's Army Corps branch insignia.

The Women's Army Corps Service Medal was awarded to any service member of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps between July 10, 1942, and August 31, 1943, or the Women's Army Corps between September 1, 1943, and September 2, 1945. The medal was issued as a once-awarded medal, and there are no devices authorized for additional presentations. The medal ranked in order of precedence below the American Defense Service Medal and above the American Campaign Medal.

The Women's Army Corps Service Medal is considered obsolete as the United States Army is a combined service and no longer maintains any separate service corps for women, although it may still be worn by those who served.