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Burma Road
noun
- a road extending from Lashio, Myanmar (Burma), to Chungking, China: used during World War II to supply Allied military forces in China.
Burma Road
noun
- the route extending from Lashio in Burma (now Myanmar) to Chongqing in China, which was used by the Allies during World War II to supply military equipment to Chiang Kai-shek's forces in China
Word History and Origins
Origin of Burma Road1
Example Sentences
Lynn took her talents overseas, performing in the USO for servicemembers during World War II. According to the museum, she was "thought to be the only American woman to have traveled the dangerous Burma Road during the war."
Lynn took her talents overseas, performing in the USO for servicemembers during World War II. She was “thought to be the only American woman to have traveled the dangerous Burma Road during the war,” according to the museum’s statement.
Or if they had already slipped through, he’d have consigned them to the “Burma Road” — the cheap seats far from the stage, and from the ballplayers.
“He told me he witnessed atrocities that Christmas Day and in prison, yet he felt lucky as he was not sent to the Burma Road because he was older and short. That saved his life,” said his grandson.
The Burma Road course has been presented in splendid condition, aided by the change of date from May to September.
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