「dunkirk」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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Following | Dunkirk a tented encampment was erected in the ground |
While at | Dunkirk Academy, she established a women's equality c |
afford the tuition for college, she taught at | Dunkirk Academy. |
It was then sold to | Dunkirk, also based in France. |
pokes on the last but one stage, from Metz to | Dunkirk and again fell foul of Desgrange's rules. |
e many British soldiers, those left behind at | Dunkirk and escapers from those captured at St. Valer |
ollowed Operation Dynamo, the evacuation from | Dunkirk and Operation Cycle, the evacuation from Le H |
ase in Lincolnshire in May 1940, firstly over | Dunkirk and then taking part in the Battle of Britain |
ber cargo were found on the French coast near | Dunkirk and Gravelines, according to other sources th |
n 19 December 2003, the municipal councils of | Dunkirk and Saint-Pol-sur-Mer decided in favour of a |
ation of the British Expeditionary Force from | Dunkirk and later drove ambulances in London during t |
He was active at | Dunkirk, and died in 1943, aged 45, when he was kille |
unit but ended up fighting in the retreat to | Dunkirk and evacuation to Britain. |
Dunkirk and Lenton | |
He was taken prisoner at | Dunkirk and spent four and a half years in German pri |
on, in late 1661, he was given command of HMS | Dunkirk and sent out as commodore of a squadron to cl |
s a Dunkirk-class fourth rate, along with HMS | Dunkirk and HMS America. |
Sicily, Catalonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, | Dunkirk and other fronts, and remained a significant |
mber, with three figures, is in the Museum at | Dunkirk; and a third, 'Peasants in a Tavern,' is in t |
It is located about half way between | Dunkirk and Saint-Omer. |
His wartime service included | Dunkirk and north-western Europe; he was mentioned in |
the Somme, and the evacuation of the BEF from | Dunkirk, and preparing the British to fight on alone, |
He survived the siege of | Dunkirk and was evacuated to England. |
It is in the electoral ward of ' | Dunkirk and Lenton', part of the Nottingham South con |
he became Town Major (lieutenant-colonel) of | Dunkirk and held the post until his death. |
f the 1793 campaign, Valenciennes, Lincelles, | Dunkirk and Lannoy. |
double line of fortified towns of Gravelines, | Dunkirk and Maubeuge-Rocroi. |
It is 17 km (11 mi) south of | Dunkirk and also 20 km (12 mi) west of the Belgian bo |
It is 20 km (12 mi) south of | Dunkirk and also 20 km (12 mi) west of the Belgian bo |
from Brest, checking that the channel between | Dunkirk and the English coast was clear of the Britis |
three Spitfires during a patrol North West of | Dunkirk and next day he claimed a Bristol Blenheim. |
iral with the Royal Squadron operating out of | Dunkirk and, in 1635, his attacks against Dutch herri |
o bad weather, Collaart was able to escape to | Dunkirk, arriving with 975 captive fisherman on 8 Sep |
n of Merville is one of the 16 cantons in the | Dunkirk arrondissement of the Nord department of the |
e other ships of the Navy that had been named | Dunkirk, as far back as the 1650s, it held added mean |
In | Dunkirk, at the first triathlon of this circuit, Jona |
The ship had set sail from the port of | Dunkirk, at the time part of the Spanish Empire, havi |
The regiment reformed after | Dunkirk at Sherborne, where Tyacke married Diana in J |
Redcar's beach was the site of the | Dunkirk beach sequence, and also stood in for Bray-Du |
owever, she did not take part in the races at | Dunkirk, Beauvais and Tours/Tourangeaux. |
n France and Belgium; he only just escaped at | Dunkirk, being one of the last to be evacuated. |
British Expeditionary Force from the port of | Dunkirk between 26 May and 4 June 1940, a German inva |
f his services with a Wing of the R.N.A.S. at | Dunkirk between March and September, 1917, during whi |
ht during operations surrounding the Siege of | Dunkirk between 6 and 8 September 1793 at Hondschoote |
f his services with a Wing of the R.N.A.S. at | Dunkirk between February and September, 1917. |
hments were sent to destroy smaller depots at | Dunkirk, Boulogne and Calais. |
fore crashing her into the outer banks of the | Dunkirk brake, where her masts tumbled overboard, sma |
the 28 December 1810, she was wrecked on the | Dunkirk brake. |
She evacuated British troops from the | Dunkirk bridgehead in May, but was sunk by a German s |
half of the Old Pretender, which assembled at | Dunkirk but did not proceed more than a few miles out |
She was sunk on 1 June 1940 off | Dunkirk by German aircraft, whilst assisting in the D |
Some find the picture given here of the | Dunkirk Carnival too negative, while others appreciat |
aracter and mad ambience of the extraordinary | Dunkirk Carnival. |
e fortunes of war resulted in evacuation from | Dunkirk, Cherbourg, Saint-Malo and other ports during |
outh and Ellesmere Port to its termination at | Dunkirk, Cheshire where it becomes the A494. |
4, 24, 41, T41) - built by At & Ch de France, | Dunkirk, completed 23 September 1926 - Lost 30 May 19 |
).That year he fought against the Barbary and | Dunkirk corsairs taking several hostile ships.He part |
Film Music Composition of the Year (Elegy for | Dunkirk, Dario Marianelli) |
The article currently lists | Dunkirk Dave as living in Dunkirk, New York. |
commander of the Dover Patrol, dispatched the | Dunkirk Division to intercept the German torpedo boat |
Though he is named for | Dunkirk, Dunkirk Dave lives in the Buffalo Zoo in Buf |
table performances are in BAFTA-award-winning | Dunkirk Dunkirk (TV series) as Private Alf Tombs (200 |
of British and French troops from the port of | Dunkirk during May 1940. |
Built in 1935, it made several trips to | Dunkirk during the evacuation of British troops from |
f ships evacuating British Army soldiers from | Dunkirk during Operation Dynamo. |
ish Expeditionary Force, which evacuated from | Dunkirk early in World War II. |
ed British Expeditionary Force evacuated from | Dunkirk early in the Second World War. |
was one of those evacuated on the last day at | Dunkirk, escaping aboard a fishing trawler. |
participating in the Battle of France and the | Dunkirk evacuation in 1940. |
ok charge of the provision of small craft for | Dunkirk evacuation in 1940. |
In 1940 during the | Dunkirk evacuation the school became a transit camp f |
ntry in such an event; in the weeks after the | Dunkirk evacuation it could only field twenty-seven d |
s one of the many soldiers rescued during the | Dunkirk Evacuation in 1940. |
side the tunnels in honour of his work on the | Dunkirk evacuation and protecting Dover during the Se |
number J30.In March 1940 she took part in the | Dunkirk evacuation rescuing 4000 men in four trips. |
of a successful German invasion following the | Dunkirk evacuation in 1940. |
as immediately engaged in the covering of the | Dunkirk evacuation and later took part in the Battle |
During the | Dunkirk evacuation (27 May-4 June 1940), 293 special |
e 2nd Division, was driven from France in the | Dunkirk evacuation, with few casualties but losing al |
e service in World War II, taking part in the | Dunkirk evacuation, the Normandy Landings, then later |
r for the British retreat from France and the | Dunkirk evacuation, Mungo-Park was wounded and his Sp |
The Sabre was damaged during the | Dunkirk evacuation, but made two more runs after temp |
In France until the | Dunkirk evacuation, the squadron equipped with fighte |
behind to treat injured soldiers, during the | Dunkirk evacuation. |
participated in the Battle of France and the | Dunkirk evacuation. |
he British Expeditionary Force, following the | Dunkirk evacuation. |
In May 1940 she participated in the | Dunkirk evacuation. |
ned most of its equipment in France after the | Dunkirk evacuation. |
asualties during World War II, as part of the | Dunkirk evacuation. |
ry Force and was withdrawn from France in the | Dunkirk evacuation. |
o the sea that would eventually result in the | Dunkirk evacuations. |
the year he was posted across the Channel to | Dunkirk, flying Caudron reconnaissance-bombers and So |
Dunkirk Football Club is a football club established | |
mission of containing the German-held port of | Dunkirk for the rest of the war in Europe. |
estroyed its guns and equipment and headed to | Dunkirk for evacuation in Operation Dynamo. |
ging 945 captured sailors back to his base in | Dunkirk for ransom. |
Shazz was born in | Dunkirk, France in 1967. he was one of the first arti |
operations with No. 3 Squadron RNAS based at | Dunkirk, France flying the Sopwith Pup. |
Guillaume Florent (born October 13, 1973 in | Dunkirk, France) is a French sailor and Olympic athle |
y Grattan to make his way to a ship bound for | Dunkirk, France, and thence to America. |
a convoy bound for Southhampton, England, and | Dunkirk, France, where she delivered her cargo to the |
December, he began flying combat missions in | Dunkirk, France, as a member of No. 1 Naval Wing (lat |
Verneuil was born in | Dunkirk, France, in 1856. |
RAF Andover, England, to the Netherlands, to | Dunkirk, France, where the last Canadian 'shots' in E |
ea to the receiving terminal at Port Ouest in | Dunkirk, France. |
tleship HMS Majestic left Dover, England, for | Dunkirk, France. |
He was born in | Dunkirk, France. |
first MC in 1940, covering the withdrawal to | Dunkirk, from where he was evacuated back to England, |
25 May to 27 July and at the failed Siege of | Dunkirk from 24 August to 8 September. |
He was present with York at the Siege of | Dunkirk from 25 August to 10 September, and commanded |
he canal connects Roeselare with the ports of | Dunkirk, Ghent, Antwerp, Brussels and Liege, via the |
Dunkirk has its own nursery and primary school and th | |
After | Dunkirk, he went through both the Western Desert and |
d by eighteen naval men, and when she reached | Dunkirk her part was to tow the wherries between the |
During the evacuation of Troops from | Dunkirk in 1940, Lifeboat Prudential, of Ramsgate was |
This force set out from | Dunkirk in November of 1796 but turned back at Flushi |
ys in New York to an alignment extending from | Dunkirk in the west to Geneva in the east via Pike, D |
ferry evacuated 7,461 service personnel from | Dunkirk in five trips between 28 May and 2 June, amon |
ties and in 1958, while in the Mediterranean, | Dunkirk, in broad daylight, collided with her sister- |
ed in the Royal West Kent Regiment and, after | Dunkirk, in the REME in World War II, working on many |
Expeditionary Force, returning to England via | Dunkirk in 1940, when it became part of the 3rd Infan |
tary engineer at the Battle of the Dunes near | Dunkirk in 1658.. |
Corps on board HM Hospital Carriers Paris and | Dunkirk in Sicily and Anzio. |
The liner was scrapped in | Dunkirk in October 1923. |
World War played a part in the evacuation of | Dunkirk in a senior role with the British Expeditiona |
Peter Angelis was born at | Dunkirk in 1685. |
She was bombed and sunk at | Dunkirk in 1940. |
schoote, in what is now the arrondissement of | Dunkirk in French Flanders, very close to where the a |
He then transferred to 3 Naval Squadron at | Dunkirk in February 1917, flying the Sopwith Pup. |
fter its defeat, Farnese broke up his camp in | Dunkirk in September. |
was mentioned as appointed to the command of | Dunkirk in August 1659, but did not go there. |
red/brown) as spoken in the arrondissement of | Dunkirk in France, in 1874 and 1972 |
rthern France and Belgium, and evacuated from | Dunkirk in Operation Dynamo. |
place near the city of Cassel, 30 km south of | Dunkirk in present-day France. |
red/brown) as spoken in the arrondissement of | Dunkirk in 1874 and 1972 |
er returning with one of the last groups from | Dunkirk in 1940. |
t stretches between the parishes of Blean and | Dunkirk, in the districts of Canterbury and Swale res |
at British forces serving at home (and, until | Dunkirk, in France and Belgium), the BBC Forces Progr |
Reaching | Dunkirk in the most dangerous period in early June, s |
ould then be sent to Saxe's invasion force at | Dunkirk, informing them that the crossing was feasibl |
Dunkirk is a residential area of Nottingham, England | |
While | Dunkirk is in the midst of its Carnival, Larbi, tired |
Dunkirk is a town in Dane County, Wisconsin, United S | |
Dunkirk is a village and civil parish between Faversh | |
krieg: From the Rise of Hitler to the Fall of | Dunkirk is 1979 a military history book by Len Deight |
In the year of her commissioning, | Dunkirk joined the 4th Destroyer Flotilla of the Home |
Born in | Dunkirk, Kent, in 1881 he entered the Royal Academy o |
nd captured an enemy post at Hundssluyt, near | Dunkirk, later that year. |
ed in 1985, and now stands at the gate to the | Dunkirk Lighthouse and Veterans Park Museum. |
, who also owned radio stations in Ashtabula, | Dunkirk, Lima, Ottawa and Logansport. |
s who also owned radio stations in Ashtabula, | Dunkirk, Lima, Ottawa and Logansport. |
kgate Rd) to the south and west and the A5117 | Dunkirk link road to the north. |
Sundowner, a | Dunkirk little ship. |
ation of the British Expeditionary Force from | Dunkirk, making a number of trips and taking off more |
as a suggestion that it be redeveloped as the | Dunkirk Memorial Channel. |
Gary C. "Gar" Samuelson (February 18, 1958 in | Dunkirk, New York - July 22, 1999 in Orange City, Flo |
Bob MacKinnon (born December 5, 1927, in | Dunkirk, New York) is a retired American collegiate a |
He was born in | Dunkirk, Nord. |
stream runs from its source in the parish of | Dunkirk, north of Canterbury, 13.4 kilometres, to the |
Dean Pees (born September 4, 1949 in | Dunkirk, Ohio) is an American football coach who is c |
, Zulu had her stern blown off by a mine near | Dunkirk on 8 November 1916 and towed to Calais. |
cinema and entertainment centre just outside | Dunkirk, on the other side of the Canal, adjacent to |
s western margin and Bergues, now inland from | Dunkirk, on its eastern one. |
kers in command of 12 warships, appearing off | Dunkirk on 17 February. |
he squadron's operations during the Battle of | Dunkirk on 26 May 1940, due to a shortage of aircraft |
Zulu had her stern blown off by a mine near | Dunkirk on 8 November 1916 and was towed to Calais. |
For every seven soldiers who escaped through | Dunkirk, one man was left behind as a prisoner of war |
Of these ships, seven were lost at | Dunkirk or during the evacuation nearer the British c |
Forfar Love was a raid overnight at | Dunkirk over the night of 4/5 August. |
te, Adam was given the task of organising the | Dunkirk perimeter. |
At the first triathlon of this circuit in | Dunkirk, Polyanski placed 5th and was the best triath |
he entered the French service, as one of the | Dunkirk Privateers. |
ngine room of HM Motor Launch 356 exploded at | Dunkirk quay, and the forward petrol tanks burst into |
he Royal Artillery and commanded a battery at | Dunkirk, receiving a Mention in Despatches.The citati |
The | Dunkirk receiving terminal is owned by the Gassled pa |
vres for its formation and it gathered in the | Dunkirk region under the command of lieutenant-colone |
Army at the age of 19 and was wounded in the | Dunkirk retreat He left the Army when he was 30 and w |
On 27 May 1940, over | Dunkirk, Riddle probably destroyed a Me110. |
wind, Tromp's 12 vessels were anchored in the | Dunkirk Roads. |
At the evacuation of | Dunkirk, she made two crossings. |
ved in many important events of World War II, | Dunkirk, Spitsbergen, and numerous Atlantic and Russi |
Four Days of | Dunkirk Stages 1 and 2 |
The | Dunkirk terminal is operated by Gassco from Gassco's |
The crime rate is lower in | Dunkirk than in Beeston, another area of Nottingham p |
At | Dunkirk the sailors refused to take more than two pas |
After the retreat from | Dunkirk the 44th Infantry remained in Britain until 1 |
t of the British Expeditionary Force; then at | Dunkirk; the Battle of Britain and finally in the Mid |
at of the British Expeditionary Force towards | Dunkirk, the 48th Division was holding the road which |
te October a naval squadron was provided from | Dunkirk, the British remained weak in the air. |
1940, how the British had arrived there after | Dunkirk, the continuous air raids during the battle o |
During the siege of | Dunkirk, the Czechoslovak Armoured Brigade suffered 6 |
Despite the near miss the Wakeful returned to | Dunkirk to continue the evacuation, embarking 640 all |
Lin from China was being towed by a tug from | Dunkirk to a Mediterranean scrapyard. |
Ironically, on the final stage from | Dunkirk to Paris, the Frenchman's supporters along th |
He contributed the figures of Douai and | Dunkirk to the facade of the Gare du Nord, and contri |
27 October - Charles II sells | Dunkirk to France for £400.000 |
This included the Battle of | Dunkirk to providing additional anti-aircraft defence |
w Rutherford, 1st Earl of Teviot, governor of | Dunkirk, to the bishopric of Caithness, and with five |
epeatedly broke through the Dutch blockade of | Dunkirk to attack Dutch shipping. |
Medic: Saving Lives - from | Dunkirk to Afghanistan (2009) was short-listed for th |
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