Amarillo! Is this the way to Amarillo? (Spanish for Yellow) Blueridge Mountains. (Carolinas/Tennessee) Smokey Mountains. (Carolinas/Tennessee) Yellow river Greenville (city I used to live in) Orangeburg (city you've never heard of- but I was there last Saturday) Green mountains (mt range in Vermont- what Vermont is named for I believe in French)
Argentina; argentum-Latin for silver. Cape Verde: Portuguese for green. Isla Negra; Spanish for black.
Yes... the whole posturing before WWII... and "you can't beat us, we've got the Maginot Line"... then they fell and surrendered within mere weeks.
To be fair, the Surrender monkeys put up a hell of a fight to let the scarper monkeys escape across the channel
To be fair, the Maginot Line may well have held- if the daft sods hadn't stopped when they got to Belgium. The Germans just went round it and came in through the tradesman's entrance.
The Brown Lands Grey Havens White Harbour Red Fork Blue Fork Golden Tooth Pinkmaiden Blackwater Rush Silverhill The Goldroad Red Lake Blackcrown Blackmont Greenblood Bronzegate The Orange Shore The Golden Fields The Red Waste The Jade Sea
Just as the sausage-munching bosch like it. Apart from the Greeks, they're the ultimate toilet traders.
Who knows, certainly possibly with a combination of bombers paratroopers and conventional ground forces. It would have taken far longer and many more German lives though, I am sure the British expeditionary force would have tickled the Huns a bit but no more. The British army was pathetically weak compared to the Germans in those years and military f**k ups was par for the course for the army leadership, take Crete for example, what a fiasco Battle of Fort Eben-Emael, they just dropped paratroopers in and they destroyed the gun positions with explosives, the Maginot line in some sections was just as susceptible to such things.