0 a number of soldiers, for guarding a fortress, town etc -- garnison
(also adjective) a garrison town.
1 to supply (a town etc) with troops to guard it -- legge garnison i
Colonists and garrisons were largely absent, and with them land-confiscations, new influxes of wealth, and the sudden arrival of new cultural habits and dispositions.
The ground plan of the fort indicates that a different type of unit was garrisoned there.
The northwest was a poor region that produced neither food to sustain the army garrisons nor valuable commodities that could lubricate interregional trade.
Newly appointed responsibility heads (baihu) and hamlet (zhai) heads were to work closely with a new line of troop posts linked with the main garrisons.
The spread of these microbes thus occurs mainly in families, day-care institutions or military garrisons.
His licences were granted to schoolmasters as well as chaplains, and to preachers in the navy or in armed garrisons overseas.
Towns were better garrisoned, policed, and reported upon, so urban rebels were more likely to show up in arrest and prison records and newspaper accounts.
They could not win a war and for their defence to be successful they depended on substantial garrisons and supporting forces.
中文繁体
衛戍部隊,守備部隊, 衛戍區,駐防地, 派(兵)駐防…
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卫戍部队,守备部队, 卫戍区,驻防地, 派(兵)驻防…
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guarnición, plaza, guarnecer…
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guarnição…
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garnizon…
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garnison, mettre en garnison…
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posádka, opatřit posádkou…
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garnison, lægge garnison i…
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