I came to the interview in an 18th century
British naval officer uniform and put on my resume that I spoke fluent Mexican #TheyHiredMeAnyway
Remember what a famous
British naval officer said as he surveyed the horizon, and use his comment as your own call - to - arms:
Read, transcribed, and annotated primary documents written by 19th century
British naval officers and members of Parliament to gain insight into European perceptions of the American Civil War for a future book by Professor Robert Bonner.
Not exact matches
Sir George Sydenham Clarke, a
British officer and colonial administrator at the time, wrote that «the battle of Tsu - shima is by far the greatest and the most important
naval event since Trafalgar.»
Captain Jerry Kyd, the Royal Navy
officer in charge of HMS Queen Elizabeth, described
naval drone warfare as an «absolute inevitability» for his ship, and the
British armed forces as a whole «in the near future.»
A group of Nazi
naval officers and crewmen are stranded on Canadian soil (we have no sympathy for the castaways, inasmuch as we have just seen them refusing food and water to a group of torpedoed
British seamen).
The second title, Choice of Broadsides, is «a swashbuckling
naval adventure» in which players guide a
British officer fighting in the Napoleonic wars and commanding a Royal Navy frigate.
Choice of Broadsides, is «a swashbuckling
naval adventure» in which players guide a
British officer fighting in the Napoleonic wars and commanding a Royal Navy frigate.
Other typically
British elements include the painted cut out of a
naval officer and the bulldog with the
British flag, which refer to the Royal Navy and Winston Churchill.
Everyone who knows Bond knows Ian Fleming is the
British former
naval intelligence
officer who wrote the 14 novels that gave rise to the roguish spy.