- dug-out shelter
- (котлованное) укрытие; блиндаж; врытое в землю укрытие
English-Russian military dictionary. 2014.
English-Russian military dictionary. 2014.
dug|out — «DUHG OWT», noun. 1. a rough shelter or cave formed by digging into the side of a hill, trench, or the like, and often reinforced with logs: »During war, soldiers use dugouts for protection against bullets, bombs, and shells. 2. a small shelter… … Useful english dictionary
dug·out — /ˈdʌgˌaʊt/ noun, pl outs [count] 1 : a low shelter that faces a baseball field and contains the bench where the players and coaches of a team sit 2 : a shelter that is made by digging a hole in the ground or into the side of a hill 3 : a small… … Useful english dictionary
Dugout (shelter) — Dugout home near Pie Town, New Mexico, 1940. A dugout or dug out, also known as a pithouse, pit house, earth lodge, mud hut, is a shelter for humans or domesticated animals and livestock based on a hole or depression dug into the ground. These… … Wikipedia
Air-raid shelter — in Tateyama[disambiguation needed … Wikipedia
Fallout shelter — A sign pointing to an old fallout shelter in New York City. Nuclear weapons … Wikipedia
dugout — dug|out [ˈdʌgaut] n 1.) a low shelter at the side of a sports field, where players and team officials sit 2.) a shelter dug into the ground for soldiers to use →↑trench 3.) a small boat made by cutting out a hollow space in a tree trunk ▪ a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
dugout — /dug owt /, n. 1. a boat made by hollowing out a log. 2. Baseball. a roofed structure enclosed on three sides and with the fourth side open and facing the playing field, usually with the floor below ground level, where the players sit when not on … Universalium
dugout — dug•out [[t]ˈdʌgˌaʊt[/t]] n. 1) naut. navig. a boat made by hollowing out a log 2) spo a roofed structure, usu. below ground level, in which baseball players sit when not on the field 3) a rough shelter dug in the ground, or in the side of a hill … From formal English to slang
dugout — dug|out [ dʌg,aut ] noun count 1. ) a small shelter by the side of a sports field where team members sit during a game when they are not playing a ) a hole or tunnel in the ground used as a shelter by soldiers during a battle 2. ) dugout canoe a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
funk hole — shelter dug into a hillside or in the ground; area dug out of the side of a trench where soldiers can hide or sleep; safe place, refuge … English contemporary dictionary
JERUSALEM — The entry is arranged according to the following outline: history name protohistory the bronze age david and first temple period second temple period the roman period byzantine jerusalem arab period crusader period mamluk period … Encyclopedia of Judaism