U boat is used for German submarines in both World Wars. It is a translation of German U-Boot which is short for Unterseeboot.
A U-Boat is the English expression for the German U-Boot (these languages are related historically - this explains the "boat" and "boot" - meaning the same). The "U" is short for "Untersee-Boot", "unter" equals "sub", "see" equals "mare"... seen? A U-Boot is German for submarine.
U-boat/U-boot/U-bout = UnterseeBoot... Under Sea Boat.
U = undersea Answer 2 It's not a you boat, ir's a u-boat.
It is spelled U-Boat not you-boat.
Helmut Walther invented the u-boat
Let's call it a U Boat. An undersea boat, a Submarine.
u have to climbed up the boat and there is going to be a hole in the boat and that is how u enter the boat
A U-boat was a submarine used by Germany in World War 1 and World War 2.
A U-Boat is, in German, ein U-boot, short for "ein Unterwasserboot". That translates to English as "Underwater Boat". "Underwater", of course, translates to Latin as "Submarine".
U-boat means under the sea boat aka submarines , they used to call it u-boat during the world wars
U-boat means under the sea boat aka submarines , they used to call it u-boat during the world wars
the U boat 'is' the German word for submarine. western nations just used submarine. U boat is short for Unterwasserboot, which translates as undersea boat or under water boat or submarine.
No, a U-boat is a submarine. A torpedo boat is the boat that destroys the submarine.