HISTORY
WORLD WAR I AND THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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No Man’s Land
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Dead Space
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The Danger Zone
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Barbed Wire Zone
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Detailed explanation-1: -the narrow, muddy, treeless stretch of land, characterized by numerous shell holes, that separated German and Allied trenches during the First World War. Being in No Man’s Land was considered very dangerous since it offered little or no protection for soldiers.
Detailed explanation-2: -Around 1885 or 1886 the term “No Man’s Land” became widely applied to the Public Land Strip. True to the plain language of the old West, the nickname referred simply to the fact that no man could legally own land in the Strip.
Detailed explanation-3: -No Man’s Land is the term used by soldiers to describe the ground between the two opposing trenches. Its width along the Western Front could vary a great deal. The average distance in most sectors was about 250 yards (230 metres).
Detailed explanation-4: -Riflemen and machine gun crews faced the enemy trenches over a desolation known as “No-Man’s Land.” Each side placed increasingly complicated networks of barbed wired in front of their trench lines to slow down and stop advancing troops.
Detailed explanation-5: -Two classic examples of No Man’s Land are the demilitarised zone between North and South Korea, and the UN buffer zone that stands between the Greek and Turkish-controlled territories in Cyprus-both born of conflicts that were never entirely resolved.
Detailed explanation-6: -No Man’s Land, Illinois, 20km north of Chicago, became especially notorious. Largely lawless, the area was renowned as “a slot machine and keno sin center where college students were being debauched with beer, hard liquor and firecrackers”.