Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
With only about 400 grenadiers left we had to hold the long front in the east.
No one else moved, not the major nor any of the watching grenadiers.
There was no sign of the grenadiers on our right.
One of the grenadiers in the back finally lost patience.
An hour before then, a force of grenadiers will set out on foot from the village down the road.
The opening fire came between 2 and 2:30 pm from the British grenadiers.
Try to get through to the west by night in small groups, with grenadiers sitting on the tanks.
The rest of his fellow grenadiers were sent on to Russia.
By morning of the day after, the soldiers' families were quite at ease with the grenadiers.
Now we've am got to pay for it, especially the poor infantry and the grenadiers.
It was at this time that the horse grenadiers were first raised.
The horse grenadiers, however, were recruited as in the rest of the army.
The grenadiers had stopped at the sight of the barrels.
The grenadiers parted before her and then immediately closed behind.
The grenadiers passed on his words to the people of Constantinople.
Most of the Syrian grenadiers had wanted those prestigious jobs.
The company of grenadiers filed from the train and was met by its new captain.
Today only the monument to the fallen Grenadiers remains of it.
In the evening Menon set out with two hundred grenadiers.
In the afternoon, five or six tanks went to meet the Russians, with several groups of grenadiers right behind them.
Some grenadiers marching, and others were pausing to fire, then moving on forward.
He killed three British grenadiers and captured the enemy flag.
Hand grenades, thrown by grenadiers, appeared around the same time.
As the horsemen closed in, the French grenadiers stood up and opened fire.
The French grenadiers killed them and entered the upper level of the mines.
Unlike many rattails and other deep-water fish, the bones of the head are firm.
Eric's hair was wet with rain and straggled over his shoulders in rattails.
Her filthy hair hung about her face in rattails.
Their elongate, tadpole-like bodies are similar in profile to the rattails.
It is unique among rattails in having 7 branchiostegal rays and a large gill opening.
Or draggle my hair over my ears in rattails.
The dominant species, rattails and cusk eels, have considerable biomass.
Bathygadus is a genus of rattails of the family Macrouridae.
Rattails may be solitary or they may form large schools, as with the roundnose grenadiers.
Her hair was hanging in sweaty rattails, and her pupils slowly descended out of her head.
Nezumia is a large genus of rattails.
Broad skates feed on cephalopods, crustaceans, and small bony fishes such as rattails.
The goblin shark feeds mainly on teleost fishes such as rattails and dragonfishes.
Grenadiers or rattails (less commonly whiptails) are generally large, brown to black gadiform marine fish of the family Macrouridae.
Bass is common along the coast, small-spotted catsharks live on the continental shelf, rattails and anglerfish populate the deep waters.
Her red hair hung in dripping rattails on her shoulders, and droplets clung to her thick red brows.
Long grey and white rattails of hair were frozen onto the glass and stuck, glittering with ice and salt crystals, onto his shoulders.
It is more strikingly marked than most rattails, with bold black streaks on the head and black and silver barring over most of the body.
It was Dolour, her cotton frock clinging to every bone in her thin body, her hair plastered in dark rattails.
They are abyssal plain scavengers with a keen sense of smell and are among the first to arrive at carrion, together with hagfish and rattails.
Rattails and brotulas are common, and other well established families are eels, eelpouts, hagfishes, greeneyes, batfishes and lumpfishes.
Rattails are thought to be generalists, feeding on smaller fish, pelagic crustaceans such as shrimp, amphipods, cumaceans and less often cephalopods and lanternfish.
In the North Atlantic, Russians pioneered the harvesting of rattails, a ubiquitous deep fish with big eyes and a long tail that swishes back and forth in a sinuous motion.
Groups of coexisting species within each zone all seem to operate in similar ways, such as the small mesopelagic vertically migrating plankton-feeders, the bathypelagic anglerfishes, and the deep water benthic rattails. "