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Inside the trenches there is dugouts. They would sleep in there.
German dugouts were often significantly better than their Allied counterparts. Most were prefabricated from concrete blocks and most could withstand direct hits from all but the heaviest shells. Most Allied bunkers were far simpler, being chiefly holes in the ground with minimal timber reinforcements.
Dugouts are a form of field fortification- were used in World War I in trench warfare. this strongly hints at some primitive peoples" practice- such as American Indians, who also had ( Dugout) canoes- later replaced by the birch bark type which ape modern stressed-skin construction! The possibility exists there was originally a diamond shaped trench which ran around the basepaths with spoil banks at the sides- and this connected semi-underground to the proper Dugout. all in all a primitive and somewhat warlike custom.
they ate fish,shellfish,manatees,deer,rabits,squirrels,berries,nuts,fruit,and corn
Hanks' Dugouts was created in 1883.
No, the dugouts in baseball heaven are under clouds.
dugouts
Yes in my opinion they are.
The Makahs built dugouts so they could get to the Dalles and trade things and crops with other indian tribes like the Chinooks. The Chinooks were the best river traders. By the way dugouts are boats made from a large, hollowed-out logs.
They build dugouts and they transport the human wastes in iron trolleys and they dump them in there. They then cover it with dirt it is almost kind of a landfill which indicates a certain area just for the wastes.
dugouts =)
No. They are in the clubhouse and lockerrooms.
The cast of Dugan of the Dugouts - 1928 includes: Pauline Garon as Betty Ernest Hilliard as Sgt. Davis Alice Knowland
The plural form for the noun dugout is dugouts.
They lived in caves and dugouts, and starved.
To keep the players in the shade