According to the link provided below, there is about 50 in this category.
In Canada, it is believed they have found one at the bottom of Churchill River in Newfoundland.
Three
Some people say 17, but the most reliable source I've seen said 15
'noch' is still in german.
It's still spelled and pronounced Dylan in the German language.
In the United States since yes. In German since no in that Germany still had many ways of taking over what they wanted
Austro-Hungarian Empire, German Empire, Ottoman Empire, and Kingdom of Bulgaria. There was no facism and dictators in this war. But the team were still the same as WWII.
There are two German U-Boats still in existence. One is in Kiel, Germany, the other is in Chicago.
The "u" stood for "underwater" and the term "u-boats" was and still is used in reference to WWI German submarines.
US Servicemen are still missing in action (unaccounted for).
I think you are referring to U-boats which is are submarines. U-boat means untersee boten (undersea boat). They were German vessels.
U-boats came in various sizes. The U-boats used by the German Navy today are rather small in comparison to the submarines of other nations. The U-boats of World War 1 were large for their day, but small by World War 2 standards. In the 1930's the major navies of the world began building large "cruiser submarines" which were considered huge at the time, but they were still smaller than some of the subs used today. The "U-cruisers" of the German Navy were no more successful in battle than any other U-boats, and they were expensive to build, so in World War 2 the Germans stopped building them. By researching U-boats using their Roman numeral type, you can get their exact length, beam, and displacement.
Means unaccounted for, or on the loose: The killer is still at large.
Certainly, U-Boat is simply a German way of saying submarine.
bodies are still washing up onshore so the number is still increasing
There aren't any really to find every one knows where they are.
ask a german
Does the US Navy still hasve PT Boats
The rumour that the Irish refuelled German U-boats during the Second World War is a persistent one but without any form of evidence, contemporary or otherwise. Sufficient testimony and documentary evidence exists from German U-Boat crews and commanders (many of them are still alive today) that we have a fairly clear picture of the movements, patterns, refuel stops and home ports of German u-boats to say that no such activity ever took place in Ireland. We have learned for instance that one "neutral" nation, Spain, did refuel German U-boats, in the port of Vigo. This has come to light through the recorded accounts of crews involved. No mention of any Irish port has ever emerged , as a refuel point or any other stop-off point. While it cant be discounted completely, the complete lack of evidence, circumstancial or otherwise suggests that the rumour is almost certainly untrue.