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trous-de-loup
/ ˌtruːdəˈluː /
noun
- military any of a series of conical-shaped pits with a stake fixed in the centre, formerly used as protection against enemy cavalry
Word History and Origins
Origin of trous-de-loup1
Example Sentences
Trous-de-loup, trōō-de-lōō, n.pl. conical pits dug in the ground, each with a vertical stake in the middle—a defence against cavalry.
Beyond the two ditches, were trous-de-loup, or wolf-traps, from twenty to seventy feet apart.
Obstacles of every kind abound, and at night each side can hear the enemy driving pickets for entanglements, digging trous-de-loup, or working forward by sapping.
In addition to the parapet of an intrenchment, a good engineer will always find time and means for constructing other artificial obstacles, such as trous-de-loup, abattis, palisades, stockades, fraises, chevaux-de-frise, crows'-feet, mines, &c.
Trous-de-loup are pits dug in the earth in the form of an inverted truncated cone, some six feet in diameter, and about the same number of feet in depth.
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