The African government was probably grateful that a civilized nation was able and willing to bring some sort of Law and Order to the country.
I have numerous books on D-Day which say US Marines did not fight there. All 4 Marine divisions were active in the Pacific at that
There were about 300 American deaths. Of these, 49 of the deaths were US Marines. An additional 53 Marines were wounded. Other sources say there were 276 American casualties.
The first telegraph sent said, "What hath God wrought?" it was sent from Baltimore to Washington.
I would say no. The term light infantry implies mobility overland. Marine units of some countries may be designated as light infantry, but most marines today are primarily for the establishment of a beachhead. They move a short distance from ship to shore, not strictly infantry, and they are rather heavy.
At this time "Britain" wasn't known as "Britain", it was "The British Empire," which spanned over canada, australia, and a lot of africa. People say that these men were sent to fight for britain, which they were, but they were british. I dont think any other nationalitis fought specifically for Britain.
No it's OORAH
I'm not a native speaker at all so this would be as best I could figure out. I am going into the Marines = Je vais dans les Marines
Americans or you could say, The Free World.
I have numerous books on D-Day which say US Marines did not fight there. All 4 Marine divisions were active in the Pacific at that
you say password sent where is it
presentacion (accent over the 'o') pronounced 'pray-sent-ah-thYON' ('th' as in 'thin')
Not sure what game your talking about when you say "halo marines", but no, you can not drive a pelican in any of the current or upcoming halo games if I'm correct.
Many people would say Space Marines or Chaos Space Marines.
No, the past tense of 'send' in English is 'sent', so 'you sent'
I have already sent your file
It is improper grammar to say "you was." You would either say, "I was sent some flowers," or "You were sent some flowers," not "You was sent some flowers." Although "Someone sent me (or you) some flowers" sounds better.
I would say so Yes , sir - Semper Fidelis !