different between squad vs fireteam

squad

English

Etymology 1

From French escouade, from Italian squadra (square) (whence also French escadre).

Alternative forms

  • escouade (archaic)

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?skw?d/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?skw?d/
  • Rhymes: -?d

Noun

squad (plural squads)

  1. A group of people organized for some common purpose, usually of about ten members.
    1. A unit of tactical military personnel, or of police officers, usually of about ten members.
      • 1912, in The New England magazine, volume 47:
        A squad of soldiers ordered them to disperse but instead of doing so they commenced throwing ice and rocks.
    2. (cricket, soccer, rugby) A group of potential players from whom a starting team and substitutes are chosen.
    3. (informal) A collective noun for a group of squid.
      • 1970, TV Guide:
        At one point, the 400-ton Calypso was brought to a standstill by a squad of squid which clogged the engines and caused a power failure. Other, highlights included an attack by predatory blue sharks, []
      • 2002, Let's Go Inc., Let's Go 2003: Britain & Ireland, Let's Go Publications:
        The Sea Life Centre retains a squad of squid and such.
      • 2012, S. Louis King, Gnome Home Papers, AuthorHouse (?ISBN), page 546:
        There's several new symbols next to the doorway symbol. Beso pushed all six of them without waiting to see what they brought; like a herd of charging rhinos or rampaging squad of squid. Next best thing though.
      • 2017, Kristen Joy Wilks, Athens Ambuscade, Pelican Ventures Book Group (?ISBN)
        I pulled in as deep a breath as my gag allowed and began relaxing my body. I used a little trick I'd learned in college. I imagined that a friendly squad of squid were massaging every muscle on the bottoms of my feet; the tension began to drain.
  2. (slang) One's friend group, taken collectively; one's peeps.
Derived terms
  • firing squad
  • flying squad
  • God squad
Related terms
  • squadron
Translations

See also

  • Appendix:English collective nouns

Verb

squad (third-person singular simple present squads, present participle squadding, simple past and past participle squadded)

  1. (intransitive) To act as part of, or on behalf of, a squad.
    We squad on the fifth of the month.

Etymology 2

Uncertain. Compare squick (disgust), squalid (dirty) with similar initial sounds.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?skwæd/

Noun

squad

  1. (Britain, dialect) Sloppy mud. [from the mid-17th c.]
    • 1875 March 13, Leicester Chronicle, quoted in the EDD:
      The lass ran all among the muck and squad.
    • 1895, Alfred Tennyson, The Poetical Works of Alfred Tennyson: Poet-laureate, page 791:
      An' she did n't not solidly mean I wur / gawin' that waäy to the bad,
      Fur the gell was as howry a trollope as / iver traäpes'd i' the squad.

Further reading

  • Robert Eden George Cole, A Glossary of Words Used in South-west Lincolnshire (1886), page 140

Anagrams

  • quads

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /es?kwad/, [es?kwað?]

Noun

squad m (plural squads or squad)

  1. squad

squad From the web:

  • what squad is sophie fergi in
  • what squad is ichigo in
  • what squad is rukia in
  • what squad does asta join
  • what squad is jiro in
  • what squad is zora in
  • what squad does yuno join
  • what squad is eren in


fireteam

English

Etymology

fire +? team

Noun

fireteam (plural fireteams)

  1. (US, military) A small unit of infantry.

fireteam From the web:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like