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doughboy    音标拼音: [d'ob,ɔɪ]


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  • Doughboy - Wikipedia
    Observers noticed U S infantry forces were constantly covered with chalky dust from marching through the dry terrain of northern Mexico, giving the men the appearance of unbaked dough or the mud bricks of the area known as adobe, with "adobe" transformed to 'dobies' and then further into "doughboy" [11]
  • Doughboy Pools
    Learn why Doughboy has been the nationwide leader in Above Ground Pools for over 75 years Doughboy is the only above ground pool manufacturer in the world to produce everything it sells in-house
  • Doughboy | WWI, US Army, Infantry | Britannica
    doughboy, nickname popularly given to United States soldiers during World War I The term was first used during the American Civil War when it was applied to the brass buttons on uniforms and thence to infantrymen
  • Why Were American Soldiers in WWI Called Doughboys? - HISTORY
    It’s unknown exactly how U S service members in World War I (1914-18) came to be dubbed doughboys—the term most typically was used to refer to troops deployed to Europe as part of the American
  • Doughboys - National WWI Museum and Memorial
    Indelibly tied to Americans, “Doughboys” became the most enduring nickname for the troops of General John Pershing’s American Expeditionary Forces, who traversed the Atlantic to join war weary Allied armies fighting on the Western Front in World War I
  • Home | The Doughboy Foundation
    The Doughboy Foundation has played a key role in envisioning, building, and now enhancing our nation’s new World War I Memorial in Washington, DC
  • Origins of Doughboy - WORLDWAR1. com
    Horatio Nelson's sailors and Wellington's soldiers in Spain, for instance, were both familiar with fried flour dumplings called doughboys, the predecessor of the modern doughnut that both we and the Doughboys of World War I came to love
  • DOUGHBOY Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
    In this massive operation, however, Allied commanders became uncertain of the location of the doughboys of the Lost Battalion, who soon fell under attack from both enemy German artillery, as well as friendly fire from the Americans
  • Who Were the Doughboys of World War I? - ThoughtCo
    Indeed, no one knows how the course of World War One gave the term Doughboy to the whole US expeditionary force However, when US serviceman returned to Europe en masse during the Second World War, the term Doughboy had vanished: these soldiers were now GI's and would be for the next decades
  • Where did the term ‘Doughboy’ come from? - We Are The Mighty
    In fact, the word Doughboy has been around since at least 1846 – more than a century before the Pillsbury version was ever introduced Doughboys was a common nickname for infantry soldiers through the Mexican-American and First World Wars





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