youth battalions - definitie. Wat is youth battalions
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Wat (wie) is youth battalions - definitie

GERMAN LIGHT INFANTRY UNITS
Jägers; Jäger battalions; Jager battalions; Jaeger battalions; Jager (military); Jaeger (military); Jäger (military); Jägertruppe; Jager (infantry)
  • German ''[[Fallschirmjäger]]'' (paratroopers) in Normandy June 1944, wearing camouflage smocks
  • Emperor [[Franz Joseph I]] in the parade dress of the ''Kaiserjäger'' 1879
  • ''Jägerpatrouille'', painting by [[Richard Knötel]] (1910)
  • Hessian  ''Jäger'' 1835–1843<ref>From H. A. Eckert, ''Uniforms of the Electorate of Hesse-Kassel from the years 1835–1843''</ref>
  • Royal Bavarian Jäger Battalion No. 2 Aschaffenburg. Oberjäger, field marching order, around 1910

youth club         
  • Harju Youth Centre at the Dallapé Park in [[Vallila]], [[Helsinki]], Finland.
PREMISES THAT HOUSE FACILITIES FOR THE SPARE-TIME ACTIVITIES OF YOUNG PEOPLE, OFTEN THOSE BELONGING TO A GIVEN SOCIAL CLUB FOR YOUTHS
Youth Club; Youth clubs; Youth centre; Youth club; Youth Centre; Youth facility
(youth clubs)
A youth club is a club where young people can go to meet each other and take part in various leisure activities. Youth clubs are often run by a church or local authority.
...the youth club disco.
N-COUNT
youth club         
  • Harju Youth Centre at the Dallapé Park in [[Vallila]], [[Helsinki]], Finland.
PREMISES THAT HOUSE FACILITIES FOR THE SPARE-TIME ACTIVITIES OF YOUNG PEOPLE, OFTEN THOSE BELONGING TO A GIVEN SOCIAL CLUB FOR YOUTHS
Youth Club; Youth clubs; Youth centre; Youth club; Youth Centre; Youth facility
(also youth centre)
¦ noun a place or organization providing leisure activities for young people.
Ghost soldiers         
  • Fall of Kabul]], 15 August 2021. The rapid collapse of governmental forces facing incoming Taliban was partly attributed to rampant ghost soldiers, low military moral and other corruption-related factors. The collapse resulted in an exodus of Afghans.
SCHEME INVOLVING NONEXISTENT SOLDIERS
Ghost battalion; Ghost battalions
Ghost soldiers or ghost battalions are names appearing on military rolls, but who are not actually in military service, generally in order to divert part of the soldiers' salaries to an influential local entity such as army officers or others. Soldiers may equally benefit from the corruption scheme by returning to their civilian occupation and routine while gaining marginal income.

Wikipedia

Jäger (infantry)

Jäger (singular [der] Jäger, plural [die] Jäger, German pronunciation: [ˈjɛːɡɐ]; "hunter") is a German military term referring to specific light infantry units.

In German-speaking states during the early modern era, the term Jäger came to denote light infantrymen whose civilian occupations (mostly hunters and foresters) made them well-suited to patrolling and skirmishing, on an individual and independent basis, rather than as part of a large-scale military unit or traditional line infantry. As a consequence, Jäger was used to describe skirmishers, scouts, sharpshooters and runners.

The word's usage and derivatives broadened over time. For instance, Feldjäger was the name given by the Prussian Army to scouts and runners. Conversely, in the modern German army (Bundeswehr), Feldjäger is the name given to military police.

Jäger is usually translated into English as:

  • "rifleman" (in an infantry role) or "Rifles" (in regimental names); and
  • "ranger" (especially in North American English; see below).

In English Jäger is often written as jaeger (both pl. and sgl.) or anglicised as jager (pl. jagers) to avoid the umlaut.