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Casualty   /kˈæʒəwəlti/  /kˈæʒwəlti/  /kˈæʒəlti/   Listen
Casualty

noun
(pl. casualties)
1.
Someone injured or killed or captured or missing in a military engagement.
2.
Someone injured or killed in an accident.  Synonym: injured party.
3.
An accident that causes someone to die.  Synonym: fatal accident.
4.
A decrease of military personnel or equipment.



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"Casualty" Quotes from Famous Books



... several adjoining works, though with a loss of two thousand men. Great as this loss was, it was not so severe as that of one officer who fell; for Eugene himself, transported with ardour, had taken part in the assault, and was seriously wounded. This grievous casualty not only gave the utmost distress to Marlborough, but immensely augmented his labours; for it threw upon him at once the direction of the siege, and the command of the covering army. Every morning at break of day he was on horseback to observe Vendome's army; and if all was quiet in front, ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 59, No. 364, February 1846 • Various

... glanced at it. It was his orders to join his battalion at the front. We shook hands and he went off, glad to be on the move again after hanging about waiting so long. In five minutes the orderly was back with orders for me to proceed at once to the 2nd London Territorial Casualty Clearing Station. I said good-bye to Adams, my servant. No man was ever more fortunate in his batmen—Adams, a typical regular, fiercely proud of his regiment; Campion, the London Territorial, a commercial traveller in civil life; and Munro, the Royal Scot, who within ...
— On the King's Service - Inward Glimpses of Men at Arms • Innes Logan

... had given for a special dinner that night. And there, too, more impressive even than that order, was a list of the several hundred stewards, together with a designation of the post of each in case of casualty. I noticed that thirty or forty of them were told off "to control passengers." After all, we were in the midst of the Atlantic, and in a crisis the elevator-boys themselves would have more authority than any passenger, however gorgeous. A thought salutary for gorgeous passengers—that ...
— Your United States - Impressions of a first visit • Arnold Bennett

... will not be displeased to see a Bond of Manrent, granted by this border freebooter to the Scottish warden of the west marches, in return for the gift of a feudal casualty of certain lauds particularized. It is extracted from Syme's Collection of Old Writings, MS. penes Dr. Robert ...
— Minstrelsy of the Scottish border (3rd ed) (1 of 3) • Walter Scott

... and his companions were so great—a little over seven to one even now, after the losses already sustained by the enemy—that he felt he dared not indulge in any hope of success, especially as those odds would be so greatly increased by even one casualty on his side; and if failure ensued, what would be the result to them all, including the women and the child still safe in the shelter of the fort? It ...
— The Missing Merchantman • Harry Collingwood


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