Trenches were a trademark of the first World War. They were extensive and elaborate. They were not used in World War II. Are you trying to find out the length of ALL the trenches together?
1300miles
10000000000000.457538 centimeters long
During war , soldiers dig long trenches to hide from the enemy's attack. Trenches are dug in mud hence keep the trench cold and makes the survival easy for the soldier.
1 minute
asdfghjkl;'Tiffani kiana;) was herek i think this is so cool and funny that anyone can put in any answer i love it so there you go and i have no clue to the question!!!
A trench is a hole that is much longer than it is wide, a narrow excavation. The usual applications of the term are: - the trenches used as manned fortifications, as in World War II - deep underwater chasms that typically mark the subduction of oceanic plates
The World War 1 trenches could stretch for hundreds of miles along the Western Front, from the North Sea to Switzerland. The trenches themselves varied in length, but typically were around 400-500 miles long overall.
10000000000000.457538 centimeters long
During war , soldiers dig long trenches to hide from the enemy's attack. Trenches are dug in mud hence keep the trench cold and makes the survival easy for the soldier.
1 minute
asdfghjkl;'Tiffani kiana;) was herek i think this is so cool and funny that anyone can put in any answer i love it so there you go and i have no clue to the question!!!
It's left over from World War I - they fought in long trenches dug to protect the soldiers from enemy gunfire. If you're "in the trenches," you're figuratively in the middle of the battle, fighting man to man.
The circumference of the world is 40000 km and a can is 11cm long then: there are 9091 cans per km and about 364 million cans to stretch around the world.
Trenches in WWI extended about 400 miles.
During WWI the dead whether in the trenches or in "No Man's Land" were left there until the Wars end. Bodies were still being found even after a decade.
A trench is a hole that is much longer than it is wide, a narrow excavation. The usual applications of the term are: - the trenches used as manned fortifications, as in World War II - deep underwater chasms that typically mark the subduction of oceanic plates
Long ditches (as in World War I, on the battlefields of Europe) were known as Trenches.
they lives in the trenches for over five year i think :)