TIME Special Ops: The hidden world of America's toughest warriors by Jim Frederick and Bob Kerrey (Nov 8, 2011)
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由Ubisoft 蒙貝利耶(Montpellier)工作室開發,
recon
Definitions
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- n. The smallest genetic unit capable of recombination.
- n. Informal Reconnaissance.
Wiktionary
- n. US, military slang reconnaissance.
- n. Genetics The smallest genetic unit that is capable of undergoing recombination.
- v. US, military slang reconnoiter.
reconnaissance
音節re・con・nais・sance 発音記号/rɪkάnəzns, ‐sns|‐kˈɔnəsns/
軍事のほかの用語一覧
【名詞】【不可算名詞】 [具体的には 【可算名詞】]
用例 |
【形容詞】【限定用法の形容詞】
用例 |
What’s So Special about
Special Ops?
by Andrew Sobel
The U.S. military’s elite training programs offer a model for the strategic deployment of human capital and for building effective teams. They have been designed as a comprehensive system of recruiting, training, infrastructure support, leadership, and organizational culture, which private-sector organizations can leverage.
special force
pl.n.
A branch of the U.S. Army composed of soldiers specially trained in guerrilla fighting.
Special Operations Forces (SOF) is a term primarily used in the West. It is an “all encompassing” term that defines a nation’s specialized units. The term “Special Forces” is age old and used by countries around the world to describe their specialized unit(s). The United States, however, reserves the term “Special Forces” primarily for its Army special operations unit that specializes in unconventional warfare (UW)/Foreign Internal Defense FID) (commonly referred to as the “Green Berets”).[2]
Examples of special operations include such operations such as reconnaissance/military intelligence, unconventional warfare, and counter-terrorism actions. Special operations are sometimes associated with unconventional warfare, counter-insurgency (operations against insurgents), operations against guerrillas or irregular forces, low-intensity operations, and foreign internal defense.
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