Provides more than fifteen thousand entries on the military establishment in the United States
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This dictionary of 15,000 terms does not have to rely on its definitions of weapons systems to justify its place in reference departments. The language of the individual soldier, who remains the primary weapon, receives most of the author's attention. Everyday terms relating to disease, crime, communication, drugs, food, hygiene, prisoners, and retirement are defined. See also references help users identify related terms, and acronyms are defined. Of major reference value is the "Topical Index," which groups terms together under 124 broad subject headings, such as Terrorism, Space, President of the United States. Definitions are complete and easily understood; care has been taken to include illustrative quotations, many of which are amusing. There are no personal-name entries, and word treatment aids such as pronunciation, syllabication, or parts of speech are not included. The typeface is perhaps too small for easy reading. All entries are arranged in letter-by-letter order; e.g., Electronic Warfare Technician precedes Electronic War. The work includes an extensive bibliography, but entries are not linked to sources in any way. There are four appendixes: tables of chemical agents, military designations, military ranks, and military protocol (e.g., the vice president of the U.S. receives a 19-gun salute).
The dictionary provides interesting definitions for terms used by military personnel on a day-to-day basis and deserves a place in many academic library reference collections.
Written by a public information office author (Eyes on the Gold, McFarland, 1986) this book is intended to facilitate any detailed inspection of the current military establishment in the United States by defining the terms used by military personnel on a day-to-day basis. Because the individual soldier remains the primary war weapon, this book goes beyond the high-tech approach so many other books have assumed when describing the military and warfare. All entries are arranged in letter-by-letter alphabetical order, regardless of word breaks. Whenever possible, entries are cross-referenced and linked to each other. This is because many terms relate to similar topics. In order to understand fully a definition or military concept, it is often necessary to read more than just one entry. With the help of this book, one may better understand how the military is organized, how it functions, what tools it has available to it, and how it responds not only to conflicts, but to social issues as well. The entire military establishment is covered. Recommended for military collections and larger public libraries.?Michael Coleman, Alabama Regional Lib. for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Montgomery
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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