Grad
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Russian Град (Grad, “codename for a type of multiple rocket launcher”), from Russian град (grad, “hail”).
Pronunciation
Noun
Grad (plural Grads)
- A type of Soviet artillery multiple rocket launcher, or a rocket fired by this.
- 1989, Jane’s Defence Weekly, volume 12, Coulsdon, UK: Jane’s, page 1050:
- It supplements the 220 mm BM-22 Uragan (‘Hurricane’) and 122 mm BM-21 Grad (‘Hail’) MRLs, already in service.
- 1998, Field Artillery Association (U.S.), Field Artillery, page 7:
- The MRL systems Smerch, Uragan, and Grad are designed to destroy concentrations of personnel and various vehicles at distances up to 70 kilometers.
- 2001, Olga Oliker, Russia’s Chechen Wars 1994-2000: Lessons from Urban Combat, Santa Monica, California: Rand, page 29:
- The Russians fought back with Grad rocket-launcher salvos and mortar attacks (they also made some use of armor).
- 2009, Rockets from Gaza: Harm to Civilians from Palestinian Armed Groups’ Rocket Attacks, New York: Human Rights Watch, page 22:
- “[w]e saw Hamas come and put up rocket launchers and fire. We could tell they were Grads by the sound, which is louder and deeper than that of Qassams.”
Synonyms
- BM-21
- Katyusha
Translations
rocket launcher
|
Anagrams
German
Etymology
Borrowed from French grade (“a grade, degree”), from Latin gradus (“a step”).
Pronunciation
Noun
Grad m (strong, genitive Grades or Grads, plural Grade or Grad)
Usage notes
- When used as a measuring unit (e.g. for temperature), the word always has the unchanged plural Grad: zwei Grad wärmer – "two degrees warmer"; einige Grad kühler – "some degrees cooler".
- When not used as a measuring unit, the plural form is Grade: Die soziale Ungleichheit hat bisher ungekannte Grade erreicht. – "Social inequality has reached degrees previously unknown." This usage is less common than in English.
Declension
Declension of Grad [masculine, strong]
Derived terms
- Breitengrad
- Grad Celsius
- Gradmesser
- Längengrad
- Quadratgrad
- Steigerungsgrad
- Vergleichungsgrad
- Verschuldungsgrad
Further reading
- “Grad” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
- “Grad” in Uni Leipzig: Wortschatz-Lexikon
- “Grad” in Duden online
Polish
Etymology
From grad.
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Grad m pers
- a male surname
Declension
Declension of Grad
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | Grad | Gradowie |
genitive | Grada | Gradów |
dative | Gradowi | Gradom |
accusative | Grada | Gradów |
instrumental | Gradem | Gradami |
locative | Gradzie | Gradach |
vocative | Gradzie | Gradowie |
Proper noun
Grad f (indeclinable)
- a female surname
Further reading
- “Grad”, in Internetowy słownik nazwisk w Polsce [Internet dictionary of surnames in Poland], 2022
Slovene
Proper noun
Grad m anim
- a surname
References
- Keber, Janez (2021) Leksikon priimkov [Dictionary of Surnames] (in Slovene), Celje: Celjska Mohorjeva družba, →ISBN, page 222