I may be wrong, but I think the Brits exchanged their Thompsons for STENs in '42. By D-Day they had the STEN Mark V, and it was the best quality STEN of them all; maybe the equal of the no-frills M1 Thompson, and more cost-effective to produce in quantity.
They intended to protect Indian land beyond boundaries established by the British government.
The original British colonies were east of the Appalachians. In fact, in the late 1750s, a law was passed that prohibited any settling beyond the Appalachians, even though the colonies extended beyond.
The colonists opposed the taxes because they didn't get any benefits. The British were paying the Native Americans for American scalps if they went beyond the Appalachian Mountains. The British were forcing Americans to buy British goods even though the Dutch were willing to sell the same goods for a better price.
The British were particularly concerned about preserving the colonies as markets for their manufactures. They feared that the spread of population beyond the mountains would stimulate local manufacturing because the high cost of land transportation would make British goods prohibitively expensive.
We should never forget it.
"Back of beyond" means "middle of nowhere" in British. As in "We're lost in back of beyond!"
Give an example of when you went above and beyond.
''Beyond petrolium''
Example sentence - The concert was wonderful beyond our expectations.
Beyond refers to something past a specific point. For instance, the car is beyond the bus on the road, is an example of beyond used in a sentence.
They intended to protect Indian land beyond boundaries established by the British government.
The original British colonies were east of the Appalachians. In fact, in the late 1750s, a law was passed that prohibited any settling beyond the Appalachians, even though the colonies extended beyond.
She was lovely, lovely beyond words.
the british
To see beyond things figuratively is to what lies ahead. Ex: I can see beyond the ocean. i'm not sure if that's a good example, but you should get the isea.
She is not, beyond any general relationship of the British population.
The Picts, or as the Romans called them, the Caledonians, were the northern British people who lived beyond Hadrian's wall.