「us-s」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| For U.S. Navy ships with a similar name, see | USS A-1. |
| USS Aaron V. Brown (1861) was a revenue cutter in t | |
| USS Abalone (SP-208), a wooden-hulled motorboat in | |
| USS Abatan (AO-92), ex-Mission San Lorenzo, convert | |
| The first | USS Abbot (DD-184) was a Wickes-class destroyer in |
| The destroyer | USS Abel P. Upshur (DD-193) was originally commissi |
| USS Abeona was a stern wheel steamer in the service | |
| USS Abner Read (DD-769) was a planned United States | |
| Gulf on 1 November, she rescued 70 survivors of | USS Abner Read (DD-526). |
| USS Abner Read, American destroyer, 01 November 194 | |
| The | USS Abraham Lincoln returning to port carrying the |
| mmanded a fighter squadron stationed aboard the | USS Abraham Lincoln; in 1994, his squadron was desi |
| , President Bush landed on the Aircraft Carrier | USS Abraham Lincoln and proclaimed Mission Accompli |
| nnax and Ned Land and Cabe Attucks fall off the | USS Abraham Lincoln and are picked up by the Nautil |
| In 1991 he assumed command of | USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) and participated in Op |
| The | USS Abraham Lincoln was awarded the Armed Forces Ex |
| (SSBN-602) | USS Abraham Lincoln |
| During this deployment, the | USS Abraham Lincoln Battle Group launched Tomahawk |
| Main article: | USS Absecon (AVP-23) |
| USS Absegami (SP-371) was a motorboat acquired on a | |
| (These included the | USS Acacia, USS Cornubia, and the USS Niagara (1855 |
| Desert Storm after six weeks of repairs by the | USS Acadia. |
| USS Accomac (LST-710/APB-49) was a LST-542-class ta | |
| The first | USS Accomac (YT-18/YTL-18) was a small harbor tug i |
| On 15 June 1898, she was renamed | USS Accomac. |
| USS Achelous (ARL-1) was one of 39 tank landing shi | |
| USS Achernar (AKA-53) was a United States Navy atta | |
| USS Acoma (YTB-701/YTM-701) was a Hisada-class dist | |
| The first | USS Acoma (SP-1228) was a relatively-fast motorboat |
| USS Action (PG-86) was the lead ship of the Action- | |
| N.Y., she served with sister gunboats including | USS Action (PG-86) and Impulse (PG-68). |
| When the | USS Adams was sent on a training cruise off the coa |
| USS Adder (SS-3) (later renamed A-2), a Plunger-cla | |
| USS Adela (1862) was a steamer captured by the Unio | |
| USS Adelaide (1854) was a steamer chartered by the | |
| USS Adirondack was one of four sister ships which i | |
| The first | USS Adirondack was a large and powerful screw-assis |
| Relieved by | USS Adirondack (AGC-15) in August 1951, Mount Olymp |
| USS Admiral Hugh Rodman (AP-126) was an Admiral W. | |
| USS Admiral W. S. Sims (AP-127) was a transport in | |
| USS Adria (AF-30) was an Adria-class stores ship ac | |
| USS Adroit (AM-509/MSO-509) was an Acme-class mines | |
| USS Advance (1917) was an Advance-class patrol boat | |
| USS Advance (AMc-63) | |
| May 23 - The | USS Advance puts to sea from New York to search for |
| USS Aegir (AS-23) was the lead ship of her class of | |
| June 1967 when she steamed to Iceland to assist | USS Aeolus (ARC-3) in a special project. |
| USS Affray (AMc-112) was an Acme-class minesweeper | |
| USS Agamemnon was decommissioned in late August and | |
| USS Agamemnon at Hampton Roads in February 1919. | |
| USS Agamenticus was a Miantonomoh-class monitor of | |
| USS Agawam (SP-570) - later renamed as the USS Nati | |
| USS Agenor (ARL-3) was one of 39 Achelous-class lan | |
| USS Agerholm (DD-826) was typical of the ships prov | |
| elaborate was a 1/24-scale cutaway model of the | USS Agerholm. |
| The | USS Agile (AMc-111), was a wooden coastal minesweep |
| The | USS Agile (MSO-421), was a non-ferromagnetic ocean |
| al District, to ship SP-747 and the patrol boat | USS Ahdeek (SP-2589) to the Culver Naval School in |
| USS Ahdeek (SP-2589) was a United States Navy patro | |
| She was commissioned as | USS Ahdeek (SP-2589). |
| USS Ahoskie (YTB-804) was a Natick-class large harb | |
| USS Akbar (SP-599) (possibly meaning "great" in Ara | |
| Redesignated | USS Akela (SP-1793) was commissioned at the New Yor |
| Calnan was among the 73 fatalities of the | USS Akron crash in 1933. |
| be constructed and launched at the Airdock were | USS Akron and its sister ship, USS Macon, built in |
| USS Alabama (Fictional or Misnamed) | |
| sa area on 14 October to sail toward Luzon, the | USS Alabama again used her anti-aircraft batteries |
| He reported aboard the | USS Alabama in 1906, and 1908 he served aboard the |
| is run by an independent government agency, the | USS Alabama Battleship Commission. |
| The fifth | USS Alabama was a patrol boat in the United States |
| As the ballistic missile submarine | USS Alabama sets sail, the crew in the enlisted men |
| USS Alabama in 2006, showing a mild, post-Hurricane | |
| See also: | USS Alabama (BB-60) #Museum ship |
| The | USS Alabama entered a drydock on 18 January 1945, a |
| USS Alabama in 2007 | |
| During World War II he served on the | USS Alabama. |
| USS Alabaster (PYc-21) was a coastal patrol yacht o | |
| USS Alacrity (SP-206) was an Alacrity -class patrol | |
| USS Alameda (Fuel Ship No. 10/AO-10), was a United | |
| USS Alameda (SP-1040) was the proposed designation | |
| USS Alarka (YTB-229), was a United States Navy tug | |
| She had originally been built as | USS Alarm (AM-140), an Admirable-class minesweeper, |
| The second | USS Alaska (ID-3035) was a minesweeper that served |
| No.) 3035 and commissioned the same day as | USS Alaska at Charleston Navy Yard at Charleston, S |
| On September 14, 1881 the | USS Alaska was in Callao Bay, Peru when a chamber i |
| after joining the navy was stationed aboard the | USS Alaska (1868) as a second class fireman. |
| ned his second award while serving on board the | USS Alaska at Callao Bay, Peru, September 14, 1881. |
| For ships named | USS Alaska, see USS Alaska. |
| USS Alaskan (ID-4542) | |
| For | USS Alaskan, see USS Alaskan (ID-4542). |
| The first | USS Albacore (SP-751) was a United States Navy patr |
| e 1917, she was commissioned soon thereafter as | USS Albacore (SP-751). |
| December 1917, rotating with the patrol boats | USS Albacore (SP-751), USS Rosa (SP-757), USS Nomad |
| Murfin served as the commanding officer of | USS Albany (CL-23) in 1916 and of West Virginia (BB |
| Luis Tiant aboard | USS Albany, June 2007 |
| 32 millimetres (1.3 in) long, dredged up by the | USS Albatross at a depth of 1,323-1,577 metres (4,3 |
| Commanding | USS Albatross, Hart served in the West Gulf Blockad |
| 910 he led the Philippine Expedition aboard the | USS Albatross. |
| where Fleischman had visited as a sailor on the | USS Albert T. Harris (DE-447). |
| USS Albert T. Harris (DE-447) was a John C. Butler- | |
| USS Alchiba (AKA-6) is once of United States navy s | |
| USS Alchiba (AKA-6) was an Arcturus-class attack ca | |
| While commander of the | USS Alchiba, he was assigned to bring supplies and |
| The | USS Alert (SP-511), was used as a patrol boat durin |
| The | USS Alert (1803), was an 18 gun sloop-of-war captur |
| USS Alfred Robb (1860) was a stern wheel steamer ca | |
| USS Algorab (AKA-8) is once of United States navy s | |
| USS Alkaid (AK-114) is once of United States navy s | |
| USS Alkes (AK-110) was an Crater-class cargo ship c | |
| USS Allen M. Sumner (DD-692), the original Allen M. | |
| ass were retired and scrapped in the 1930s, the | USS Allen survived into the 1940s and served throug |
| USS Allendale (APA-127) was a Haskell-class attack | |
| USS Allentown (PF-52), a Tacoma-class frigate, was | |
| The second | USS Alliance was a screw gunboat that was in servic |
| The second | USS Alligator was a sloop in the United States Navy |
| val battle fought between the American schooner | USS Alligator and a squadron of three piratical sch |
| Brutus de Villeroi's next ship, the | USS Alligator, would be largely inspired from this |
| In early November 1822, the schooner | USS Alligator, under the command of Lieutenant Will |
| r, and also badly damaged the attack cargo ship | USS Almaack. |
| The | USS Alnitah (AK-127) was a Crater-class cargo ship |
| The | USS Aloe is featured in a mural depicting the histo |
| USS Alpha (SP-586) was a motor yacht that served as | |
| USS Alshain (AKA-55) is once of United States navy | |
| USS Alstede (AF-48) was an Alstede-class stores shi | |
| Navy in 12 May 1917 and placed in commission as | USS Althea (SP-218) under the command of Ensign E. |
| USS Althea (1863) was a screw steamer acquired by t | |
| USS Aludra (AK-72) and USS Aludra (AF-55), both of | |
| USS Alvin C. Cockrell (DE-366) was named in his hon | |
| USS Amaranthus (1864) was a screw steamer acquired | |
| USS Amazon (1858) was a wooden-hulled bark of 318 t | |
| , the squadron transferred to CVW-11 aboard the | USS America (CVA-66). |
| CVW-1 was assigned to | USS America in mid-1982, forming a partnership whic |
| Other ships in the battle group included | USS America (CV-66), Philippine Sea, and USS John F |
| Subsequently, he was given command of the | USS America (CV-66), during which time he took part |
| Next came battle group operations with | USS America and a visit to Kenya. |
| In December 1990, the squadron boarded the | USS America and USS Theodore Roosevelt headed for S |
| asing responsibility in intelligence aboard the | USS America, Patron Squadron Special Projects Unit |
| During that time, the | USS America/CVW-1 team conducted combat operations |
| The | USS America/CVW-1 team was the only carrier battle |
| USS American (1861), part of the Stone Fleet sunk a | |
| USS American (ID-2292), was a freighter built in 19 | |
| USS American (ID-2292) | |
| as | USS Amherst (PCER-853) |
| A destroyer escort, the | USS Amick (DE-168), was named in his honor and laun |
| USS Ammonoosuc (inboard ship) c1870 | |
| The | USS Ammonoosuc (later renamed USS Iowa) was laid do |
| USS Ammonusuc (AOG-23) was a Mettawee-class gasolin | |
| k on 27 February and immediately went alongside | USS Amphion (AR-13) for tender availability which l |
| District, Hiawatha operated with the guard ship | USS Amphitrite and was manned either by sailors fro |
| er naval career as ship's tender to the monitor | USS Amphitrite (Monitor No. 2) in New York Harbor. |
| USS Amsterdam (CL-101) | |
| Yeomen and storekeepers of the | USS Anacapa in shockingly non-regulation attire typ |
| USS Anacostia (AO-94) was a Escambia-class replenis | |
| 30, 1861, the Thomas Freeborn returned with the | USS Anacostia, a 200 ton vessel with 2 guns, and US |
| USS Anado (SP-455) was a United States Navy patrol | |
| She was commissioned as | USS Anado (SP-455) on 17 August 1917. |
| USS Anamosa was deployed to Naval Station Guam by t | |
| USS Anamosa (YTB-409) was a Sassaba-class harbor tu | |
| er saw considerable action as US Navy Transport | USS Ancon in World War Two. |
| fter the end of World War One and fitted out as | USS Ancon (ID-1467), a troop transport to return Am |
| He now coaches Masters, | USS, and club swimmers at all levels while residing |
| 4-16 he had a number of commands in the Legion ( | USS), and then (1918-1919) in the Ukrainian Galicia |
| Destroyers | USS Anderson (9 - 14 March), Sims, Hammann (9 - 14 |
| USS Andres (DE-45) was an Evarts-class destroyer es | |
| USS Andrew Jackson (SSBN-619) was a Lafayette-class | |
| The first | USS Anemone was a steamer acquired by the Union Nav |
| USS Annabelle (SP-1206), also spelled Anna Belle, w | |
| She was commissioned as | USS Annabelle or Anna Belle (SP-1206) on 16 August |
| e ever transmitted and received was between the | USS Annapolis (AMGR 1) in South China Sea to Pacifi |
| reclassified as AGMR-1 on 1 June 1963, renamed | USS Annapolis on 22 June 1963 and finally recommiss |
| governor of Krasnoyarsk Krai against Alexander | Uss, another man with major business links. |
| USS Antaeus (AS-21/AG-67) - later renamed USS Rescu | |
| USS Anthedon (AS-24) was an Aegir class submarine t | |
| USS Anthony (DD-172/DM-12) was a Wickes class destr | |
| USS Anthony (DD-172) and USS Anthony (DD-515) were | |
| USS Antietam (CG-54) is a Ticonderoga-class guided | |
| USS Antietam (1864) was constructed during the fina | |
| was moored at Pier 7 alongside her sister ship | USS Antietam (CG-54) and the battleship USS Missour |
| USS Antietam earned the 2007 and 2008 Battle Effici | |
| n board the training carrier of the period, the | USS Antietam (CV-36). |
| nt was home port for the aircraft carriers, the | USS Antietam, USS Tarawa, and the USS Leyte. |
| placed Dufek in command of the aircraft carrier | USS Antietam, then on Kwajalein in the Pacific and |
| somewhat larger than, the Java-class frigates ( | USS Antietam, USS Guerriere, USS Minnetonka, and US |
| USS Antigone (ID-3007) was a transport for the Unit | |
| oned at Key West, Florida, on 5 October 1917 as | USS Anton Dohrn (SP-1086). |
| USS Anton Dohrn (SP-1086) was a United States Navy | |
| USS Antrim (FFG-20) was the twelfth ship of the Oli | |
| Members of Antrim's family attended the | USS Antrim (FFG-20) launching ceremony. |
| hip, an escort aircraft carrier, had been named | USS Anzio. |
| The second | USS Apache was a United States Coast Guard cutter t |
| She was commissioned on 11 June 1898 as | USS Apache with Lieutenant Edwin Geer in command |
| The first | USS Apache, later USS Aspinet (YF-176), was a Unite |
| USS Aphrodite (SP-135) was an armed yacht that serv | |
| commissioned at New York City on 5 June 1917 as | USS Aphrodite (SP-135) with Lieutenant Commander Ra |
| on of his services as commanding officer of the | USS Aphrodite. |
| wetok until 24 May when she was taken in tow by | USS APL-44. |
| USS Apollo (AS-25) was an Aegir-class submarine ten | |
| USS Ara (AK-136) was a Crater-class cargo ship comm | |
| Not to be confused with | USS Arabia (ID-3434). |
| USS Arabia (ID-3434) hauled out of the water, proba | |
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