ANSWERS: 12
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I believe it was "debarkation" or "disembarking", something along those lines.
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i believe its destruction, demolition...
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Actually the "D" is for "day". Various operations during the day commenced at "H-Hour".
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I think the D stands for deliverance.
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Because it came after B-Day and C-Day
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D-day meant the day of the actual landing; like H was meant for H-Hour.
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D-day in actuality, the D doesn't stand for anything in particular. "D-Day" is just the day that a specific operation commences. Operation Neptune, officially the invasion of the Normandy coast, was the largest amphibious assualt up until that point, and the scale was huge. It was printed in the papers when the invasion started, and the name stuck. It was not the last amphibious invasion of the war, nor was it the bloodiest.
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hmm independence day of any country
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may b coz its start with d
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hmm may be associated with any person
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D-Day and H-Hour are general military terms used to name a specific occurance(attack , operation, or similar) without using the actual date or time. The 'D' and 'H' stood for 'Day' and 'Hour'. And they were used with '+' or '-' a number to refer to time after or before D-Day or H-Hour. Example: June 8, 1944 would of been 'D-Day +2' in any reports for the Normandy landings.
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It's pretty much like VE-day, "Victory in Europe" day. But to get it straight, it pretty much stands for "Day of Days".
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