yes, it was.
in Spain obviously
spanish amarda
The Rosario, The San Salvador, The San Lorenzo, The San Mateo, The San Felipe
The English used fire-ships against the Spanish Armada in 1588 as a tactical surprise to disrupt the enemy's formation. They sent unmanned ships filled with combustibles into the anchored Spanish fleet, causing panic and chaos among the Spanish sailors. This forced the Armada to scatter and abandon their planned strategy, significantly weakening their position. The successful use of fire-ships contributed to the ultimate defeat of the Armada.
ships. An armada of ships.
The collective noun for ships are:a fleet of shipsan armada of shipsa formation of shipsa flotilla of ships
No, armada is a fleet of ships.
yes, it was.
The noun 'armada' is a collective noun for:an armada of newtsan armada of ships
The collective nouns are a fleet of ships or an armada of ships.
They started out with 151 ships.
It was a fleet of ships.
The collective noun armada will serve for any number ships; an armada of a thousand ships. There is no particular word for a thousand of ships.
A fleet or Convoy. A Vessel Traffic Service (VTS) nightmare ;).
Armada
Armada, as in the Spanish Armada.