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单词 total war
释义

Definition of total war in English:

total war

noun
  • A war which is unrestricted in terms of the weapons used, the territory or combatants involved, or the objectives pursued, especially one in which the accepted rules of war are disregarded.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Vietnam War was not a total war because America feared Chinese intervention, as happened in Korea.
    • These are considered to be the first total wars in world history, i.e., the bulk of the nation's economy was directed to the war.
    • Rarely will conflict be resolved through the finality of unconditional surrender; limited war is the rule, and total war the exception.
    • This time they were going to remain on the defensive in western Europe, while mobilising their military forces and industrial base to fight a total war.
    • However, another aspect of total war, unrestricted submarine warfare, caused the USA to enter the war and to a degree negate success in the east.
    • The grip that party fanatics had on German society made it difficult to challenge the Führer's determination to wage a bitter total war rather than admit defeat.
    • World War One was a total war, and in such conflicts, restraints are cast aside.
    • On Republic Day, the Prime Minister used warlike words to assure the nation of a coming total war against the criminal onslaught.
    • Occasionally, the term total war approximates the meaning of modernity.
    • One might argue that in war - especially a total war or a war with no rules - one must fight to win.
    • The grass and tree-covered landscape is still indelibly marked by massive craters, the result of the total war of the 1914-18 Western Front.
    • During a massive conflict, embracing all aspects of total war, economic warfare can be effective if pursued correctly.
    • There are total wars and limited wars, regional wars and world wars, conventional wars and nuclear wars, high-technology wars and low-technology wars, inter-state wars and civil wars, insurgency wars and ethnic wars.
    • Perhaps no one who maintains the Civil War was a total war means it so literally.
    • North Vietnam was fighting a total war and viewed the fighting in Laos and Cambodia as part of a regional conflict.
    • The best the United States could do in the Gulf was to prioritize its objectives and obtain as many as possible without fighting a total war or breaking up the coalition.
    • After the ‘Marco Polo Bridge Incident’ on July 7, 1937, Japan launched a total war against China.
    • He described the futile competition born of total war and the development of trench-warfare systems.
    • When the institution reopened, the instruction emphasized the staff skills required to create and manage armies capable of waging total war.
    • Furthermore, he provides ample historical illustration of how the transformation from monarchy to democracy changed the conduct of war from limited warfare to total war.
 
 

Definition of total war in US English:

total war

noun
  • A war that is unrestricted in terms of the weapons used, the territory or combatants involved, or the objectives pursued, especially one in which the laws of war are disregarded.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Occasionally, the term total war approximates the meaning of modernity.
    • Rarely will conflict be resolved through the finality of unconditional surrender; limited war is the rule, and total war the exception.
    • These are considered to be the first total wars in world history, i.e., the bulk of the nation's economy was directed to the war.
    • On Republic Day, the Prime Minister used warlike words to assure the nation of a coming total war against the criminal onslaught.
    • The grass and tree-covered landscape is still indelibly marked by massive craters, the result of the total war of the 1914-18 Western Front.
    • After the ‘Marco Polo Bridge Incident’ on July 7, 1937, Japan launched a total war against China.
    • The Vietnam War was not a total war because America feared Chinese intervention, as happened in Korea.
    • When the institution reopened, the instruction emphasized the staff skills required to create and manage armies capable of waging total war.
    • One might argue that in war - especially a total war or a war with no rules - one must fight to win.
    • However, another aspect of total war, unrestricted submarine warfare, caused the USA to enter the war and to a degree negate success in the east.
    • This time they were going to remain on the defensive in western Europe, while mobilising their military forces and industrial base to fight a total war.
    • During a massive conflict, embracing all aspects of total war, economic warfare can be effective if pursued correctly.
    • The best the United States could do in the Gulf was to prioritize its objectives and obtain as many as possible without fighting a total war or breaking up the coalition.
    • Furthermore, he provides ample historical illustration of how the transformation from monarchy to democracy changed the conduct of war from limited warfare to total war.
    • Perhaps no one who maintains the Civil War was a total war means it so literally.
    • The grip that party fanatics had on German society made it difficult to challenge the Führer's determination to wage a bitter total war rather than admit defeat.
    • World War One was a total war, and in such conflicts, restraints are cast aside.
    • There are total wars and limited wars, regional wars and world wars, conventional wars and nuclear wars, high-technology wars and low-technology wars, inter-state wars and civil wars, insurgency wars and ethnic wars.
    • He described the futile competition born of total war and the development of trench-warfare systems.
    • North Vietnam was fighting a total war and viewed the fighting in Laos and Cambodia as part of a regional conflict.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/10 20:14:58