The Minute Book
Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Military Vocabulary (1942)
Topic: Drill and Training

Application of Fire
Visual Training

Canadian Army Training Pamphlet No. 1; A General Instructional Background for the Young Soldier, 1942

Military Vocabulary

Men will be familiarized with all terms applied to features of ground, colours, shapes and military objects, so that their powers of description and recognition may be improved. A specimen military vocabulary is appended; it is intended to be a guide to instructors. The terms should be introduced as opportunity offers, during the soldier's service. It should be increased by teaching the local equivalent for, or additional terms appropriate to, the station in which the unit is serving, for example (in Canada, and respective of region) the added or dissimilar artificial features such as "silos," "elevator" (grain), "power dam," "snake fence"; the term equivalents: "trail" for ride or path, "gully" for ravine, "muskeg" for marsh, "rapids" for shallows; the sometimes necessary subdivision of conifers into the many local tree variants of the type, "balsam," hemlock," etc.; "scrub" or (perhaps) "sugar-bush" for copse, "prairie" for moor or common, "semaphore" for railway-signal, "turn-pike" for metalled road, "creek" for watercourse, etc.

i.    Features, artificial:—

TrackPost and rail fencesFerry
FootpathWire fencesFord
Ride RoadsIron fencesWindmill
TarredHurdle fencesRailway signals
MetalledSign postChurch tower
UnmetalledPylonFactory
Fenced and unfencedViaductCrane
Cross roadsCulvertGasometer
Sunken roadsCuttingGable-end
Telegaph PoleEmbankmentQuarry
 CanalRicks
 LockStooks

ii.    Colours:—

WhiteYellowRed
BlackBlueBrown
 Green  

iii.    Features, natural:—

Fir (trees)CopsePlough
Poplar (trees)GorseRoot field
Bushy-topped (trees)Corn fieldStubble
Hedgerow   

iv.    Topographical:—

RidgeKnollMiddle distance
ValleySaddleBackground
FoldSlopes, forwardDead ground
DefileSlopes, reverseCliff
Crest-lineSlopes, concaveGorge
HorizonSlopes, convexRavine
SpurForegroundClearing
  Salient

v.    Field Engineering:—

TrenchBarricadeRight angle
ParapetDug-outSquare
ParadosDefended postTriangle
FirestepDefended localityCircular
RevetmentObservation postVertical
TraverseBlockhouseHorizontal
BreastworkEmplacements  

vi.    Fire,—types of:—

DirectIndirectEnfilade
FrontalObliqueOverhead
 Flanking 

The Senior Subaltern


Posted by regimentalrogue at 12:01 AM EDT

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