[
US
/ˈɑɹmi/
]
[ UK /ˈɑːmi/ ]
[ UK /ˈɑːmi/ ]
NOUN
- a large number of people united for some specific purpose
- a permanent organization of the military land forces of a nation or state
How To Use army In A Sentence
- In meetings Thursday with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, the country's army chief and others, Gates called the antiterror operations a success so far, "and he acknowledged to all of them that we realize that has come with a great deal of sacrifice for the military," Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said following the sessions. Stars and Stripes
- Once upon a time there was an old sow of impeccable reputation who lived a quiet life inside a busy farmyard. Times, Sunday Times
- The soldiers were requisitioning things left and right, not good for an occupying army.
- Minister for Defence Robert Hill talks with an Australian Army captain and warrant officer at a Middle East base.
- I've had one letter opener seized, two Swiss army knives.
- Although tensions existed between the army and the group, the president defused them by playing the politics of tribalism and regionalism, often targeting northerners as the source of the nation's problems.
- He has always been candid about his reasons for joining the army. Times, Sunday Times
- The cuts are a heavy blow for the army 's rank and file. Times, Sunday Times
- Nemours showed him at once what use to make of the army under his orders, and having enfiladed his National Guard battalions, and placed his artillery in echelons, he formed his cavalry into hollow squares on the right and left of his line, flinging out a cloud of howitzers to fall back upon the main column. Burlesques
- Aryan shrieks and runs out of my room, making such noise that her footfalls sound like an army trooping onto the battlefield.