释义 |
Definition of lance corporal in English: lance corporalnoun A rank of non-commissioned officer in the British army, above private and below corporal. (英陆军)一等兵 Example sentencesExamples - He fought in the Tet Offensive in 1968 as a lance corporal with the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines.
- He was due to marry his fiancée Debbie this year and was promoted from the rank of lance corporal to corporal only days before his death.
- Born in York in November 1907, he was called up into the Army in November 1939 and joined the Royal Army Service Corp, becoming a reluctant lance corporal.
- When the lance corporal picked up that machinegun to save the lives of his fellow Marines, he had never fired a machinegun before.
- Another, 21-year-old lance corporal, with the Irish Guards, has yet to be informed of the charge against him and has not yet been named.
- In trying to protect herself, the lance corporal caught her finger on the sharp edge, causing a wound which needed two stitches.
- The father-of-three and former army lance corporal was more than two-and-a-half times over the drink drive limit.
- During the Second World War, he was a lance corporal and PE instructor in the army, and once met his younger brother, Ronald, by chance in Cairo while they were both on war service.
- Her mother married a dashing Jack-the-lad, who had been a lance corporal in the Royal Army Medical Corps in the war.
- Bob, himself a former soldier with 2 Signal Regiment based at Imphal Barracks in York, said his son was a lance corporal in the Royal Logistics Corps, working as a chef.
- He demonstrated personal courage in battle and was awarded the Iron Cross-First Class, relatively rare for a lance corporal.
- Stephen had the rank of lance corporal in the Signals, the section into which those with a scientific bent were traditionally placed.
- Once in the war theater, the thinking goes, even a seasoned reporter will hug his favorite lance corporal's ankle for protection and file patriotic fluff.
- The feelings of hundreds of family and friends were summed up by Wendy Schofield, 39, of Brookford Close, Burnley, whose husband Mark, 40, is a Territorial lance corporal.
- George Solomou is a lance corporal in the Royal Army Medical Corps, attached to the London Irish Rifles.
- The 39-year-old, who has been in the army since leaving school, was in the front of the lead vehicle being driven by a lance corporal with the Norwegian bomb disposal officer in the back.
- The former Royal Engineers lance corporal had 14 years' service with West Midlands Police.
- When The Green Howards were evacuated from Dunkirk he was promoted to sergeant from lance corporal.
- Emmett, a former lance corporal, brought his Gordon Highlanders hat that he wore in the war with him to the service.
- I went through all the ranks from private to acting full colonel, but in retrospect the cushiest of all was unpaid acting lance corporal, which I held for my long journey on a troopship to the Middle East.
OriginLate 18th century: on the analogy of obsolete lancepesade, the lowest grade of non-commissioned officer, based on Italian lancia spezzata 'broken lance'. Definition of lance corporal in US English: lance corporalnounˈˌlæns ˌkɔrp(ə)rəlˈˌlans ˌkôrp(ə)rəl An enlisted person in the US Marine Corps ranking above private first class and below corporal. Example sentencesExamples - Stephen had the rank of lance corporal in the Signals, the section into which those with a scientific bent were traditionally placed.
- The feelings of hundreds of family and friends were summed up by Wendy Schofield, 39, of Brookford Close, Burnley, whose husband Mark, 40, is a Territorial lance corporal.
- Once in the war theater, the thinking goes, even a seasoned reporter will hug his favorite lance corporal's ankle for protection and file patriotic fluff.
- Emmett, a former lance corporal, brought his Gordon Highlanders hat that he wore in the war with him to the service.
- The 39-year-old, who has been in the army since leaving school, was in the front of the lead vehicle being driven by a lance corporal with the Norwegian bomb disposal officer in the back.
- He demonstrated personal courage in battle and was awarded the Iron Cross-First Class, relatively rare for a lance corporal.
- He fought in the Tet Offensive in 1968 as a lance corporal with the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines.
- I went through all the ranks from private to acting full colonel, but in retrospect the cushiest of all was unpaid acting lance corporal, which I held for my long journey on a troopship to the Middle East.
- He was due to marry his fiancée Debbie this year and was promoted from the rank of lance corporal to corporal only days before his death.
- Her mother married a dashing Jack-the-lad, who had been a lance corporal in the Royal Army Medical Corps in the war.
- During the Second World War, he was a lance corporal and PE instructor in the army, and once met his younger brother, Ronald, by chance in Cairo while they were both on war service.
- Born in York in November 1907, he was called up into the Army in November 1939 and joined the Royal Army Service Corp, becoming a reluctant lance corporal.
- Bob, himself a former soldier with 2 Signal Regiment based at Imphal Barracks in York, said his son was a lance corporal in the Royal Logistics Corps, working as a chef.
- In trying to protect herself, the lance corporal caught her finger on the sharp edge, causing a wound which needed two stitches.
- When The Green Howards were evacuated from Dunkirk he was promoted to sergeant from lance corporal.
- The father-of-three and former army lance corporal was more than two-and-a-half times over the drink drive limit.
- The former Royal Engineers lance corporal had 14 years' service with West Midlands Police.
- Another, 21-year-old lance corporal, with the Irish Guards, has yet to be informed of the charge against him and has not yet been named.
- George Solomou is a lance corporal in the Royal Army Medical Corps, attached to the London Irish Rifles.
- When the lance corporal picked up that machinegun to save the lives of his fellow Marines, he had never fired a machinegun before.
OriginLate 18th century: on the analogy of obsolete lancepesade, the lowest grade of noncommissioned officer, based on Italian lancia spezzata ‘broken lance’. |