English to Malay Dictionary battleship

battleship

kapal perang
definition
noun
Wind has disrupted the advance of great warships like battleships and aircraft carriers.
a heavy warship of a type built chiefly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with extensive armor and large-caliber guns.
translation of 'battleship'
noun
kapal perang
example
These include the battlecruisers HMS Hood, HMS Repulse and the 'battleship' HMS Prince of Wales.
Divers are expected to return to the wreck site later this year to check on the oil which still leaks from the 'battleship' .
If the Americans lost a capital ship (a 'battleship' or aircraft carrier) it was simply a loss.
This is a legacy of the Second World War, in which the aircraft carrier replaced the 'battleship' as the capital ship of fleets.
The grim battle in the twilight of the Arctic Circle was the last time men of the Royal Navy faced the enemy in a 'battleship' .
Admiral Yoshikawa pointed out that the first Kashima in the Japanese navy was a 'battleship' built by Armstrong on the Tyne in 1906.
A few minutes earlier, USS 'battleship' Nevada and other ships opened fire on Utah.
Each battle group was protected by 'battleships' and cruisers.
He saw future naval confrontations whereby the 'battleships' and cruisers of a fleet would protect the carriers.
Only current Italian 'battleships' , also designed for near seas, had such limited autonomy.
Wind has disrupted the advance of great warships like 'battleships' and aircraft carriers.
The limits were not on ‘naval forces’, as Chomsky states, but on 'battleships' and aircraft carriers.
The Navy had arrived with impressive looking warships and 'battleships' , armed to the teeth with many a cannon and gun.
Admiral Kondo's main force of two 'battleships' and six heavy cruisers followed soon after.
Thus, the U.S. Navy had carried 'battleships' on its rosters for little more than a century.
Unlike aboard a frigate, the men aboard the Navy's 'battleships' and cruisers felt nothing during transit.
The 'battleships' and destroyers following HMS Fearless arrived on the scene at a speed of 21 knots.
Two 'battleships' packed with Marines lurk offshore.
Both vessels were built in England, albeit 136 years apart, and both were designated first class 'battleships' .
The irony is that British submarines did not really have the potential to sink 'battleships' as their armour was simply too great.
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