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A homonym for the trench around a castle could be "moat."
It could also protect the castle if the enemies comes.
A homophone for a speck is "spec". A homophone for "trench around a castle" could be "moat".
Sheesh! It's the "how much wood would a woodchuck..." again. 1. See the answer to the woodchuck question. 2. Read on. How many tunnels could tono tunnel if a tono could tunnel tunnels. Obvious, yeah? If a tono could tunnel tunnels, then a tono would tunnel as many tunnels as a tono can tunnel. Perhaps tunefully, turbulently, turgidly, temperately, tenaciously, terribly, tempestuously, trepidaciously or terpicatively. Who knows.
Another word for a deep ditch that is dug around a castle is a moat. You could call it a trench, or you could fill it full of water and call it a moat.
The Viet Cong used tunnels primarily as infiltration routes around South Vietnam. They would be able to move under ground to near their point of attack without being detected. After attacking a village or military they would return to the tunnel and disappear. They also could move supplies and cache weapons in them for later use. Some of the tunnels even had hospitals.
Yes, the tunnels are used for utilites such as electric, water and gas pipes. The city and more so Tarleton State University built the tunnels so that these utilites could be accessed and maintained without digging up the campus grounds and streets. It is rumored that the Purple Poo use the tunnels to travel around campus undetected. Currently the tunnels are collapsing and deemed a hazard so anyone found tresspassing is charged and arrested.
A wedding planner could tell you where you could book a castle wedding. But some castles available as a wedding venue are Cooling Castle Barn, Berkeley Castle and Leeds Castle all in England.
There are currently 4. More could come out.
The castle of a noble was most commonly referred to as a manor, or it could just be called a castle. The entirety of the land could be called a fief, or fiefdom.
there were (still are) tunnels underneath Lake Erie so if they needed to escape to Canada they could
It depends on what kind of castle you mean. If you mean a castle from a fantasy story, dragons and/or enemy knights could threaten a castle. If you mean a toy block/lego castle, then just stepping on it or dropping it threatens it. If you mean a real-life castle, then a bomb or something like a bomb could threaten it.