Top 10 similar words or synonyms for swiftsure

warspite    0.852345

foudroyant    0.824345

volage    0.821288

tonnant    0.810898

peterel    0.800541

nereide    0.790875

laforey    0.789961

merchantman    0.788391

lowestoffe    0.784383

pomone    0.781695

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for swiftsure

Article Example
HMS Swiftsure The Royal Navy has had ships named HMS "Swiftsure" since 1573, including:
HMS Swiftsure (1787) HMS "Swiftsure" was a 74-gun third rate ship of the line of the British Royal Navy. She spent most of her career serving with the British, except for a brief period when she was captured by the French during the Napoleonic Wars in the Action of 24 June 1801. She fought in several of the most famous engagements of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, fighting for the British at the Battle of the Nile, and the French at the Battle of Trafalgar.
HMS Swiftsure (1787) In November 1802, after General de Rochambeau replaced Charles Leclerc as governor of Saint-Domingue, Rochambeau started executing blacks by drowning; he had the entire garrison of Fort Dauphin transferred to "Swiftsure" and thrown overboard by her crew. Rochambeau then ordered all French ships to carry out similar executions. Only Willaumez, who was in command of the naval forces, refused, stating that "The officers of the French Navy are not executioners. I will not obey."
Swiftsure-class submarine A few were upgraded with the capability to launch Tomahawk cruise missiles in addition to their original armaments of torpedoes, mines and anti-ship missiles. They were also the first class of Royal Navy submarines to be built with shrouded pump-jet propulsors.
Swiftsure-class submarine Both "Splendid" and "Spartan" were ordered to sail south for the Falkland Islands two days before the Argentine invasion of the islands on 30 March 1982. "Spartan" was the first ship to arrive in the islands and began to enforce a maritime exclusion zone imposed by the British. Shortly after, "Spartan" sighted Argentine merchant shipping mining the harbour at Stanley, but was not ordered to attack. This was partly due to British concerns about escalating the war too early, but also to avoid scaring off more valuable targets such as the Argentine aircraft carrier . Unlike , neither "Spartan" nor "Splendid" fired in anger during the Falklands War, but they did provide valuable reconnaissance to the British Task Force on Argentine aircraft movements and the submarines' presence effectively restricted the freedom of action of the Argentine Navy which spent most of the war confined to port.