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dasbootdasfoot t1_j9ep449 wrote

Surely everyone should know by now that the UK is the best at naming stuff. Challenger, starstreak, spitfire, hurricane, bulldog, warrior, rapier, sky sabre, Trojan, titan, fury, Vulcan and so on 😁

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freecain t1_j9eubco wrote

Boaty mcboatface

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lemmepickanameffs t1_j9exdi8 wrote

David Plowie Nicole Saltslinger

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RobThorpe t1_j9ih084 wrote

There were some ones we didn't excel in naming though...

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TheJBW t1_j9ikuk3 wrote

Yeah, but you also did “Dreadnought” and then slapped that name on a ship so fucking awesome that all battleships that came after it had to be called dreadnoughts.

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EndoExo t1_j9fgc2g wrote

It didn't help that the US named everything "M-Number" and gave multiple pieces of equipment the same numbers. Oh, you want an M1? Did you mean the M1 Garand rifle, the completely unrelated M1 carbine rifle, an M1 Thompson gun, an M1 flamethrower, an M1 helmet, or an M1 light tank? Oh, you want an M1 tractor? Cool, which kind?

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colouredinthelines t1_j9khs6r wrote

One of their first was named for General Mark V, Fifth of his name.

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JohnDunstable t1_j9fhimd wrote

Confederate Generals. Brits know a sly dig.

Edit. Learn your history The Lee and Stuart tanks were named by the British prior to the deployment of the Grant and Sherman.

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edwardrha OP t1_j9fkyom wrote

Sherman was a Union general.

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JohnDunstable t1_j9fod41 wrote

But first the UK named the Stuart and the Lee. Then the Grant and the Sherman.

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