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be garrisoned
noun
A permanent military post.
Exact(8)
Therefore, "It is absolutely indispensable that the country be garrisoned with troops as thickly as possible".
Members of Congress already are doing their own lobbying, hoping that the brigades returning from Germany will be garrisoned at bases in their home districts in the United States.
Troops can be garrisoned in conquered territories to defend against enemy attacks.
Mamucium was designed to be garrisoned by a cohort, about 500 infantry.
York Castle continued to be garrisoned until 1684, when an explosion destroyed the interior of Clifford's Tower.
Gibraltar was one of the proposed targets on the basis that it was small, could easily be garrisoned, supplied and defended, and was in a highly strategic location.
Similar(52)
It was garrisoned by the French in 1833.
The reforms overturned a constitutional stricture against foreign soldiers being garrisoned in Nicaragua, Téllez pointed out.
It stood 12 ft. high, and was garrisoned at six points with cannon.
These imperial provinces might be "unarmed," but many of them were garrisoned, some quite heavily.
It was garrisoned first by marines, and then by Italians and Romanians.
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