trench warfare

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trench warfare

The soldiers endured months of stagnant trench warfare.

Definition

Noun: 1. A type of armed combat in which opposing troops fight from fortified ditches (trenches) facing each other. This form of warfare is characterized by a static front line, with soldiers protected in trenches, leading to prolonged stalemates and battles of attrition. 2. A prolonged and bitter struggle between competing parties where neither side can gain a decisive advantage. This figurative sense describes any conflict or competition that becomes deadlocked and exhausting.

Usage Examples
  • Literal Military Sense:

    • The introduction of machine guns and artillery contributed to the horrific stalemate of trench warfare during World War I.
    • Life in trench warfare was miserable, with soldiers enduring mud, disease, and constant shelling.
  • Figurative Sense:

    • The labor negotiations turned into a form of trench warfare, with neither management nor the union willing to concede.
    • The political campaign devolved into trench warfare, with both candidates exchanging daily attacks but making no progress in the polls.
Advanced Usage
  • "to bog down in trench warfare": To become stuck in a prolonged, unproductive struggle.
    • The legal dispute bogged down in trench warfare, draining the resources of both companies.
Variants and Related Words
  • Trench (n): A long, narrow ditch. In a military context, it is an excavated defensive position.
    • The soldiers dug a trench for protection.
  • Warfare (n): The waging of war; armed conflict.
    • Modern warfare often involves cyber attacks.
Synonyms
  • Stalemate: A situation in which further action or progress by opposing sides seems impossible.
  • Attrition: The process of gradually reducing the strength or effectiveness of an opponent through sustained pressure.
  • Deadlock: A situation, typically one involving opposing parties, in which no progress can be made.
Related Idioms and Phrases
  • A war of attrition: A conflict in which each side tries to win by gradually wearing down the other's strength and resources, closely related to the concept of trench warfare.
    • The price competition between the two companies became a war of attrition that hurt both their profits.
trench warfare

The soldiers endured months of stagnant trench warfare.

Noun
  1. a type of armed combat in which the opposing troops fight from trenches that face each other
    • instead of the war ending quickly, it became bogged down in trench warfare
  2. a struggle (usually prolonged) between competing entities in which neither side is able to win
    • the hope that his superior campaigning skills would make a difference evaporated in the realization that electioneering had become a form of trench warfare