First-world-war Sentence Examples
There were three german air raids on the Hartlepools during the First World War.
These had been used extensively during the First World War on many items, including armaments.
It looked rather like a first world war battlefield.
The First World War is remembered as a time of bloody carnage.
These Books are contained in the central bronze and glass casket with the Book of Life from the First World War.
The file is simply an administrative convenience introduced about the time of the First World War.
Similarly, the British exploited Arab discontent with Turkish rule to extend their own empire in the Middle East during the First World War.
It was only after the First World War that the direct land route became er the First World War that the direct land route became e common.
How did horse chestnuts help the war effort during the First World War?
Largely self-taught, he achieved great eminence in the musical world in the years leading up to the First World War.
AdvertisementThe end of the First World War heralded an eralded an era of uncertainty for the people of Govan.
The river runs steadily through this vivid evocation of a childhood in India at the time of the First World War.
Except, the war is remarkably like the idiocy of the first world war rather than any of those fought during Victoria's reign.
In the two seasons after the First World War the club were champions of the Spartan league before joining the Isthmian league in 1921.
Eisenhower became a temporary lieutenant colonel during the First World War.
AdvertisementThe older one had an interesting lych gate dating from after the first world war.
More calamitous still was the Unionist decision to cast in its lot with Prussian militarism during the First World War.
The RCS collection includes two scrapbooks of First World War Memorabilia belonging to Captain Arthur O. Temple Clarke, R.A.S.C. (RCMS 319 ).
The number of RAF squadrons had been very much reduced at the end of the First World War.
In his late teens he had fought in the trenches of the First World War.
AdvertisementThe RCS collection includes two scrapbooks of First World War Memorabilia belonging to Captain Arthur O. Temple Clarke, R.A.S.C. (RCMS 319).
Britain was by the eve of the First World War the most industrialized and urbanized country in the world.
This weighty first volume takes the reader up to the end of Sassoon 's participation in the First World War.
When his son returned from the first World War with a combat helmet, he came up with a new idea.