sonarman


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sonarman

(ˈsəʊnɑːmən)
n, pl -men
(Nautical Terms) a sonar operator
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Freak weather effects and overeager sonarman may have accounted for many reports.
(37) Intriguingly, a PLAN sonarman later claimed that he had detected a U.S.
* Train the warfighter to master an individual specialty (e.g., sonarman, machinist mate, etc.).
I identified myself as a former naval officer aboard the seaplane tender USS Pine Island, and said I based my charge upon classified radio messages and a conversation with the sonarman on the Maddox on the night of the claimed attack.
The sonarman's war; a memoir of submarine chasing and mine sweeping in World War II.
The Sonarman's War: A Memoir of Submarine Chasing and Mine Sweeping in WorldWar II by TWS member H.
While on active duty, he served on the USS Seneca as a sonarman. Returning to civilian life, he married Betty on Nov.
Navy during World War II as a sonarman on the USS Whitman.
Freak weather effects and over-eager sonarman may have accounted for many reports.
Cook, sonarman or fire controlman, you are assigned to [don] an OBA and be a nozzleman or hoseman.
Dwight Towers Armand Assante Moira Davidson Rachel Ward Julian Osborne Bryan Brown Mary Holmes Jacqueline McKenzie Peter Holmes Grant Bowler Jenny Holmes Allison and Tieghan Webber Neil Hirsch Steve Bastoni Chief Wawrzeniak David Paterson Sonarman Swain Kevin Copeland Radioman Giles Todd MacDonald Lt.