April 6 1917
AnswerThe U.S. joined the allied troops, against Germany and their forces.
The United States.
The word 'allied' is the past participle of the verb to 'ally' (allies, allying, allied), meaning to join forces, combine, associate. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, for example: allied forces, alliedresources.
Yes. In fact, Japan was among the first few nations to join the war. The country sided with the Allied Forces.
No one joined in the Russian civil war.
In World War I, the two belligerents were the Allied or Entente Forces and the Central Powers. The Allied Forces were Britain, France, Russia, Japan, Italy, Belgium, Canada and Serbia. America would join in the final year of the war. The Central Powers were Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman empire and Bulgaria. In World War II the two sides were the Allied Forces and the Axis Powers. The Allied forces were Britain, France, the Soviet Union, China, Canada and America. The Axis Powers were Germany, which controlled most of continental Europe, Italy and Japan.
No, the US joined the allied forces. Some parts of Europe were against each other (eg Britain & Germany)
Axis
World War I
France was part of the allied forces (America, UK, Australia etc.) until it was taken over by Germany, the Nazis made France into a "puppet" nation and than ordered them to fight against the allies. They began on the allied side, but were forced to surrender and join the axis forces after being conquered by the Nazis.
“Doughboys” became the nickname for the troops of General John Pershing's American Expeditionary Forces, who traversed the Atlantic to join war-weary Allied armies fighting on the Western Front in World War I.
Join forces...