BARRACKS - traducción al árabe
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BARRACKS - traducción al árabe

BUILDINGS OR SETS OF BUILDINGS ERECTED AS COMMON LIVING QUARTERS FOR GROUPS OF SOLDIERS OR WORKERS
Military barracks; Barraks; Army barracks; Barrack block; Barrack; Troop Barracks
  • Boden]], Sweden.
  • Ostrobothnia]], [[Finland]]
  • Barracks at [[Hampton Court Palace]] (1689), Greater London; these are Britain's oldest surviving purpose-built barracks.
  • Carlo De Cristoforis Barracks in [[Como]]
  • Barracks of the 117th infantry regiment in [[Le Mans]], France (c.1900).
  • Chelsea Barracks, as rebuilt in the 1960s
  • Old barracks building in Września
  • Many barracks contain large numbers of beds or bunk beds with minimal common areas
  • The officers' barracks and mess establishment at [[Fort York]], [[Toronto]], built in 1815 after the original 1793 fort was destroyed by American soldiers during the [[War of 1812]].
  • Bundespolizei]] (federal police) in [[Frankfurt]], Germany.
  • [[Kempston Barracks]], built to serve as depot for the [[Bedfordshire Regiment]] in 1875 (one of a number of similar barracks established following the Cardwell reforms)
  • Barracks in [[Gdańsk]], Poland.
  • Fort George barracks, 1753
  • Officers' accommodation at Cambridge Infantry Barracks in [[Portsmouth]] (1820s)
  • Cavalry barracks, [[Christchurch, Dorset]], 1795: officers' accommodation in the end blocks, ground-floor stables with men's accommodation over.
  • Queenston limestone]] (1840), the site's only surviving structure.
  • Late 18th century barracks from the reign of [[George III]], [[Edinburgh Castle]], [[Scotland]]
  • military town]] in [[Novosibirsk]] (built in 1913)
  • The [[Preobrazhensky Life Guards Regiment]] barracks in [[Saint Petersburg]]

BARRACKS         

الفعل

أَوَّى

barracks         
اسْم : ثُكْنَة . ثُكنة الجنود
barracks         
ثكنة جـ ثكن وثكنات

Definición

barracks
n.
1) (AE) to GI the barracks
2) (AE) to police (up) the barracks
3) disciplinary barracks
4) restricted to barracks

Wikipedia

Barracks

Barracks are buildings used to accommodate military personnel. The English word originates from the 17th century via French and Italian from an old Spanish word "barraca" ("soldier's tent"), but today barracks are usually permanent buildings. The word may apply to separate housing blocks or to complete complexes, and the plural form often refers to a single structure and may be singular in construction.

The main object of barracks is to separate soldiers from the civilian population and reinforce discipline, training, and esprit de corps. They have been called "discipline factories for soldiers". Like industrial factories, some are considered to be shoddy or dull buildings, although others are known for their magnificent architecture such as Collins Barracks in Dublin and others in Paris, Berlin, Madrid, Vienna, or London. From the rough barracks of 19th-century conscript armies, filled with hazing and illness and barely differentiated from the livestock pens that housed the draft animals, to the clean and Internet-connected barracks of modern all-volunteer militaries, the word can have a variety of connotations.

Ejemplos de uso de BARRACKS
1. Marines at the Marine barracks and 58 at the French military barracks.
2. Inside the barracks were civilian victims, lying on the ground.
3. Harry, 22, completed the course yesterday and will soon return to the Household Cavalry Regiment‘s Combermere barracks in Windsor to command his troop and settle into barracks life.
4. Other barracks had laundry strung from bare beams.
5. "Attention!" he commands when an officer enters the barracks.