Dictionary Definition
destroyer
Noun
1 a small fast lightly armored but heavily armed
warship [syn: guided
missile destroyer]
2 a person who destroys or ruins or lays waste
to; "a destroyer of the environment"; "jealousy was his undoer";
"uprooters of gravestones" [syn: ruiner, undoer, waster, uprooter]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɔɪə(r)
Translations
- Finnish: hävittäjä
- German: Zerstörer
- Hebrew: משחתת (mashkhetet) (2)
- Italian: distruttore (1), cacciatorpediniere (2)
- Sumerian: alal
- Bahasa Melayu: Kapal Pembinasa
Extensive Definition
In naval
terminology, a destroyer is a fast and maneuverable yet
long-endurance warship
intended to escort larger vessels in a fleet or
battle
group and defend them against smaller, short-range but powerful
attackers (originally torpedo
boats, later submarines and aircraft).
Before World War
II destroyers were light vessels without the endurance for
unattended ocean operations; typically a number of destroyers and a
single destroyer
tender operated together. During and after the war, larger and
more powerful destroyers capable of independent operation were
built, particularly as cruisers ceased to be used in
the 1950s and 60s.
At the dawn of the 21st century, destroyers are
the heaviest surface
combatant ships in general use, with only four nations (the
United
States, Russia, France and Peru) operating
cruisers and none operating battleships. Modern
destroyers, also known as guided
missile destroyers, are equivalent in tonnage but drastically
superior in firepower to cruisers of the World War II era, capable
of carrying nuclear
missiles that are able to destroy cities.
Early history
The emergence of the destroyer, and development
up until WWII, was related to the torpedo. The invention of the
self-propelled torpedo in the 1860s gave the potential for a nation
to destroy a superior enemy battle fleet using only steam launches
from which torpedoes could be dropped. Fast boats to carry
torpedoes were built and called torpedo boats, and these had
developed by the 1880s into little ships of 50-100 tons, fast
enough to evade enemy picket boats.
One response to the torpedo boat threat was the
building of faster and more heavily gunned picket boats called
catchers. At first the threat to a battle fleet was considered only
to exist when at anchor, but as faster and longer range torpedoes
were developed the threat was extended to cruising at sea. As
catchers were then needed to escort the battle fleet at sea they
needed the same seaworthiness and endurance, and as they
necessarily became larger they were now officially termed torpedo
boat destroyers, soon contracted to destroyer in English. (The
anti-torpedo boat origin of this type of ship is retained in its
name in other languages, including French
(contre-torpilleur), Italian
(cacciatorpediniere), Spanish
(cazatorpedero), Polish
(kontrtorpedowiec), Czech
(torpédoborec), and so on.
Once destroyers became more than just catchers
guarding an anchorage it was realised that they were also ideal to
perform the role of torpedo boats themselves, so they were fitted
with torpedo tubes as well as guns. At that time, and even into
WWI, the only function of destroyers was to protect their own
battle fleet from enemy torpedo attacks, and to make such attacks
on the battleships of the enemy. The task of escorting merchant
convoys was still in the future.
An important development came in 1884 with
Swift,
a large torpedo boat with six 47 mm quick-firing guns and three
torpedo tubes. While still not fast enough to engage torpedo boats
reliably, she at least had the armament to deal with them.
The Japanese Kotaka
("Falcon") of 1885, was "the forerunner of torpedo boat destroyers
that appeared a decade later" (Kaigun, David C. Evans). Designed
upon Japanese specifications and ordered from the London Yarrow
shipyards in 1885, she was transported in parts to Japan, where
she was assembled and launched in 1887. She was armed with four
1-pounder (37 mm) quick-firing guns and six torpedo tubes, reached 19 knots
(35 km/h), and at 203 tons, was the largest torpedo boat
yet designed. In her trials in 1889, Kotaka demonstrated that she
could go beyond a role of coastal defense, and was capable of
following larger ships on the high seas. The Yarrow shipyards,
builder of the parts for the Kotaka, "considered Japan to have
effectively invented the destroyer" (Howe).
Almost immediately after the order of Kotaka was
placed, Fernando
Villaamil, second officer of the Ministry of the Navy of
Spain where he was put in charge of developing the concept of a
new ship designed to combat torpedo boats, placed an order for a
large torpedo gunboat in November 1885, with the British builder
James and George Thompson, of Clydebank, not
far from where the Yarrow shipyards would move from London twenty
years later. The ship, named
Destructor (literally Destroyer), was laid down at the end of
the year, launched in 1886, and commissioned in 1887. Her
displacement was 380 tons, and she was armed with one 90 mm
Hontoria
cannon, four 57 mm Nordenfeldt
cannon, two 37 mm Hotchkiss guns
and 3 Schwartzkopff torpedo tubes. Her complement was 60 men. In
terms of gunnery, speed (22.5 knots in trials) and dimensions, the
specific design to chase torpedo boats and her high seas
capabilities, Destructor is widely considered the first destroyer
ever built.
The Spanish Destructor is thought to have
influenced the designation and concept of later destroyers
developed by the British Navy.
Shortly afterwards Britain began experiments with
the Rattlesnake
class 'torpedo boat catcher', a class of 17 large torpedo boats
- the first precursors of destroyers to be built as a class, rather
than as single ships. On tests, Rattlesnake proved to be marginally
faster than torpedo boats, but not fast enough to be
decisive.
The first ships to bear the formal designation
"Torpedo boat destroyer" (TBD) were the Havock
class of two ships of the Royal Navy,
developed in 1892 under the newly appointed Third Sea
Lord Rear Admiral
"Jackie" Fisher, and launched by Yarrows in London in 1893.
Havock had a 240 tons displacement, a speed of 27 knots
(50 km/h), and was armed with a single 12-pounder (76
mm) gun, three 6-pounders (57 mm), and three 46 cm torpedo
tubes. She also had the range and speed to effectively travel with
a battle fleet.
The French navy, an extensive user of torpedo
boats, built its first destroyer in 1899, with the Durandal-class
'torpilleur d'escadre'.
The United
States commissioned its first destroyer, USS
Bainbridge, Destroyer No. 1, in 1902 and by 1906 there were 16
destroyers in service with the Navy.
Pre World War I
Destroyer design evolved around the turn of the
20th century in several key ways. The first was the introduction of
the steam
turbine. The spectacular unauthorised demonstration of the
turbine powered Turbinia at the
1897 Spithead Navy Review, which, significantly, was of torpedo
boat size, prompted the Royal Navy to order a prototype turbine
powered destroyer, HMS
Viper of 1899. This was the first turbine warship of any kind
and achieved a remarkable on sea trials. By 1910 the turbine had
been widely adopted by all navies for their faster ships.
The second development was the replacement of the
boat-style turtleback foredeck by a raised forecastle, which provided
better sea-keeping as well as more space below deck.
The British experimented with oil propulsion for
the
Tribal class of 1905 but switched temporarily back to coal for
the later Beagle
class in 1909. Other navies also adopted oil, for instance the
USN with the Paulding
class of 1909. In spite of all this variety, destroyers adopted
a largely similar pattern. The hull was long and thin, with a
relatively shallow draft. The bow was either raised in a forecastle
or covered under a turtleback; underneath this were the crew
spaces, extending 1/4 to 1/3 the way along the hull. Aft of the
crew spaces was as much engine space as the technology of the time
would allow: several boilers and engines or turbines. Above deck,
one or more quick-firing guns was mounted in the bows, in front of
the bridge; several more were mounted amidships and astern. Two
torpedo tube mountings (later on, multiple mountings) were
generally found amidships.
Between 1890 and 1914 destroyers became markedly
larger: initially 300 tons was a good size, but by the start of the
First World War 1000 tons was not unusual. However, construction
remained focused on putting the biggest possible engines into a
small hull, resulting in a somewhat flimsy construction. Often
hulls were built of steel only 1/8in thick.
By 1910 the steam-driven displacement (i.e. not
hydroplaning)
torpedo boat had become redundant as a separate type. Germany
nevertheless continued to build such torpedo boats until the end of
WW1, although these were effectively small coastal destroyers. In
fact Germany never distinguished between the two types, giving them
pennant numbers in the same series and never giving names to
destroyers. Ultimately the term torpedo boat came to be attached to
a quite different vessel - the very fast hydroplaning motor driven
MTB.
Life on early destroyers
Early destroyers were extremely cramped places to
live. In the Havock-class no crew member could ever get undisturbed
rest, with officers sleeping on cushioned chairs around the
wardroom instead of beds. Spray and condensation made life
miserable. The first British class to have separate cabins for
officers, or a heating stove for the captain, was the River
class of 1902.
Early Destroyer tactics and engagements
The destroyer's initial purpose was to protect
against torpedo boats, but navies soon appreciated the flexibility
of the fast, multi-purpose vessel that resulted. Vice-Admiral Sir
Baldwin Walker laid down for the Royal Navy:
- Screening the advance of a fleet when hostile torpedo craft are about
- Searching a hostile coast along which a fleet might pass
- Watching an enemy's port for the purpose of harassing his torpedo craft and preventing their return
- Attacking an enemy fleet
The destroyer's first major use came in the
devastating Japanese attack on the Russian fleet in Port
Arthur at the opening of the Russo-Japanese
War in 1904. Three destroyer divisions attacked the Russian
fleet in port, firing a total of 18 torpedoes, and severely
damaging two Russian battleships.
World War I
While capital ship engagements were scarce in
World War I, destroyer units were almost continually engaged in
raiding and patrol actions. The first shot of the war at sea was
fired on 5
August 1914 by a destroyer of
the 3rd Flotilla, Lance,
in an engagement with the German auxiliary minelayer Königin Luise. The
first British naval casualty was Amphion,
the light cruiser leading the 3rd Flotilla, which ran into a mine
laid by Königin Luise.
Destroyers were involved in the skirmishes that
prompted the
Battle of Heligoland Bight, and filled a range of roles in the
Battle
of Gallipoli, acting as troops transports and fire support
vessels, as well as their fleet-screening role. Over 80 British
destroyers and 60 German torpedo-boats took part in the Battle of
Jutland, which involved pitched small-boat actions between the
main fleets, and several foolhardy attacks by unsupported
destroyers on capital ships. Jutland also concluded with a messy
night action between the German High Seas Fleet and part of the
British destroyer screen.
The threat evolved by World War I
with the development of the submarine, or U-boat. The
submarine had the potential to hide from gunfire and close
underwater to fire torpedoes. Early-war destroyers had the speed
and armament to intercept submarines before they submerged, either
by gunfire or by ramming. Destroyers also had a shallow enough
draft that torpedoes would find it difficult to hit them.
The desire to attack submarines underwater led to
rapid destroyer evolution during the war, which were quickly
equipped with strengthened bows for ramming, depth
charges and hydrophones for identifying
submarine targets. The first submarine casualty to a destroyer was
the German U
19, rammed by Badger
on 29
October 1914. While U 19 was
only damaged, the next month Garry
successfully sank U 18. The first
depth-charge sinking was on 4 December
1916, when U
19 was sunk by Llewellyn.
The submarine threat meant that many destroyers
spent their time on anti-submarine patrol; once Germany adopted
unrestricted submarine warfare in January 1917, destroyers were
called on to escort merchant convoys. US Navy destroyers were
among the first American units to be dispatched upon the American
entry to the war, and a squadron of Japanese destroyers even joined
Allied patrols in the Mediterranean. Patrol duty was far from safe;
of the 67 British destroyers lost in the war, collisions accounted
for 18, while 12 were wrecked.
At the end of the war the state-of-the-art was
represented by the British
W class.
Inter-war
The trend during World War I had been towards
larger destroyers with heavier armaments. A number of opportunities
to fire at capital ships had been missed during the War, because
destroyers had expended all their torpedoes in an initial salvo.
The British
'V' & 'W' classes of the late war had sought to address
this by mounting six torpedo tubes in two triple mounts, instead of
the four or two on earlier models. The 'V'and 'W's set the standard
of destroyer building well into the 1920s.
The next major innovation came with the Japanese
Fubuki
class or 'special type', designed in 1923 and delivered in
1928. The design was initially noted for its powerful armament of
six five-inch (127 mm) guns, together with three triple torpedo
mounts. The second batch of the class gave the guns high-angle
turrets for anti-aircraft warfare, and the 24-inch (60 cm)
oxygen fueled 'Long Lance' Type 93
torpedo. The later ''Ariake
class of 1931 further improved the torpedo armament by storing
its reload torpedoes close at hand in the superstructure, meaning
reloading could be accomplished in 15 minutes.
Most other nations replied with similar larger
ships. The US Porter
class adopted twin five-inch (127 mm) guns, and the subsequent
Mahan
class and Gridley
class (the latter of 1934) increased the number of torpedo
tubes to 12 and 16 respectively. In the Mediterranean, the Italian
navy's building of very fast light cruisers of the Condottieri
class prompted the French to produce exceptional destroyer
designs. The French had long been keen on large destroyers, with
their Chacal
class of 1922 displacing over 2000 tons and carrying 130 mm
guns; a further three similar classes were produced around 1930.
The Le
Fantasque class of 1935 took performance to an exceptional
level. The class carried five guns and nine torpedo tubes, but
their speed was truly exceptional - reaching , which remains the
record speed for a steamship and for any destroyer. The Italians'
own destroyers were almost as swift, most Italian designs of the
1930s being rated for , and carrying four or six 120 mm guns as
well as torpedoes.
Germany started to build destroyers again during
the 1930s as part of Hitler's rearmament programme. The Germans
were also fond of large destroyers, but while the initial
Type 1934 displaced over 3,000 tons their armament was no
better than many smaller classes. The later Type 1936 did, however,
adopt heavy 150 mm guns. German destroyers also used innovative
high-pressure steam machinery: while this should have helped their
efficiency, it more often resulted in mechanical problems.
Once German and Japanese armament became clear,
the British and American navies consciously focused on smaller,
more numerous units. The British built a series of destroyers the
A
Class to I
Class which were about 1400 tons standard displacement, had
four guns and eight torpedo tubes; the American Benson
class of 1938 similar in size, but carried five guns and ten
torpedo tubes. The British realising the need for heavier gun
armament built the
Tribal class of 1936 (sometimes called "Afridi" after one of
two lead ships). These ships displaced 1850 tons and were armed
with eight guns in four twin turrets and four torpedo tubes. These
were followed by the
J Class and L class destroyers with six guns in twin turrets
and 8 torpedo tubes
Anti-submarine sensors included sonar (or ASDIC), although
training in their use was indifferent. Anti-sub weapons changed
little, and ahead-throwing weapons, a need recognized in WWI, had
made no progress.
Operations in the inter-war period
During the 1920s and 1930s destroyers were often
deployed to areas of diplomatic tension or humanitarian disaster.
British and American destroyers were common on the Chinese coast,
even supplying landing parties to protect colonial interests.
World War II
- Main articles: British World War II destroyers, German World War II destroyers
By World War
II the threat had evolved once again. Submarines were more
effective, and aircraft
had become important weapons of naval warfare; once again the fleet
destroyers were ill-equipped for combatting these new targets. They
were fitted with new anti-aircraft
guns, radar, and forward-launched
ASW weapons, in addition to their existing light guns, depth
charges, and torpedoes. By this time the destroyers had become
large, multi-purpose vessels, expensive targets in their own right
rather than expendable vessels for the protection of others;
moreover, they were one of the most sunk kinds of ships even though
they were mass produced. This led to the introduction of smaller
and cheaper specialized anti-submarine warships called corvettes and frigates by the Royal Navy and
destroyer
escorts by the USN. These ships had
the size and displacement of the original torpedo boat destroyers
the contemporary destroyer had evolved from.
Post-war
Some conventional destroyers were completed in the late 1940s and 1950's which built on wartime experience. These vessels were significantly larger than wartime ships and had fully automatic main guns, unit Machinery, radar, sonar, and antisubmarine weapons such as the Squid mortar. Examples include the British Daring class, US Forrest Sherman-class, and the Soviet Kotlin-class destroyers.Some World War II-vintage ships were modernised
for anti-submarine warfare, and to extend their service lives, to
avoid having to build (expensive) brand-new ships. Examples include
the US FRAM
I programme and the British Type 15
frigates converted from fleet destroyers.
The missile age
The advent of surface-to-air missiles (SAM) and surface-to-surface missiles (SSM), such as the Exocet, in the early 1960s changed naval warfare. Guided missile destroyers (DDG in the US Navy) were developed to carry these weapons and protect the fleet from air, submarine and surface threats. Examples include the Soviet Kashin-class, the British County class, and the American Charles F. Adams-class.Modern destroyers
In the US Navy,
destroyers operate in support of carrier
battle groups, surface action groups, amphibious groups and
replenishment groups. The destroyers currently in use by the US
Navy are the
Arleigh Burke-class. Destroyers (with a DD hull
classification symbol) primarily perform anti-submarine warfare
duty while guided
missile destroyers (DDGs) are multi-mission (anti-submarine,
anti-aircraft,
and anti-surface warfare) surface combatants. The relatively-recent
addition of cruise
missile launchers has greatly expanded the role of the
destroyer in strike and land-attack warfare. As the expense of
heavier surface combatants has generally removed them from the
fleet, destroyer tonnage has grown (a modern
Arleigh Burke-class destroyer has the same tonnage as a
World
War II light
cruiser). Arleigh Burke is billed by her builders as
ton-for-ton the most powerful warship in history.
The Royal Navy currently operates 8 ships of the
Type
42 class. The destroyers (as well as frigates) are, as always,
the workhorses of the fleet, the former optimised for air defence
and the latter for surface and subsurface warfare. They are equally
at home in large task groups or on independent operations which may
include sanctions enforcement, humanitarian relief or anti-drug
patrols. British destroyers (of recent times) have an average
displacement of around 5000 tonnes, and are armed with a mixture of
guns and missiles including 114 mm (4.5 inch) Mk 8 guns, Sea Dart
Missiles, 20 mm Close range guns, Vulcan Phalanx close in weapons
system (CIWS), and anti submarine torpedo tubes. These ships are
due to be replaced by the new Type
45 or Daring Class destroyers which will displace roughly 7,200
tonnes and are predicted to be the most advanced surface warships
in the world when they enter service at the end of the
decade.
The
Canadian Navy currently operates the Iroquois-class
destroyers, a class of four helicopter-carrying,
anti-aircraft, guided
missile destroyers. Launched in the 1970s, the Iroquois were
the first Canadian all gas turbine
powered military ships, using two turbines for cruise power, and
another two fast-starting "boost" turbines for speeds of up to 29
knots (54 km/h) (such an arrangement is known as COGOG).
Previously the Soviet Navy had used all-gas turbine propulsion on
their Kashin class destroyers of the 1960s but the Iroquois were
the first to be built to this scheme either on Canada or in the US.
The design of the Iroquois was a major inspiration for the US's
later Spruance
class ships. They were originally fitted out for anti-submarine
warfare, but the entire class underwent major retrofits as a
part of the Tribal Class Update and Modernization Program, or
TRUMP, in the 1990s. These refits had the effect of re-purposing
the ships for air-defence, and the ships are now referred to as
area air-defence destroyers.
The Russian Navy and the People's Liberation Army
Navy of the
People's Republic of China operate the Sovremenny
class, a class of large multi-purpose missile destroyers. They
are powered by pressure-fired boilers, making them capable of
speeds in excess of . Their armament consists of 8 SS-N-22
Sunburn anti-ship missiles, launchers for SA-N-7
Gadfly anti-air missiles and two AK-130 twin-barreled
130 mm automatic naval guns which can fire laser-guided shells.
While they also carry 533 mm torpedo tubes and RBU-6000 rocket
launchers for use against submarines, their primary mission is to
attack surface ships. Their anti-aircraft missiles have a surface
attack mode, and both the 130 mm guns and the torpedoes are useful
against ships at close range.
The Indian Navy
operates the Delhi
class destroyers. These ships are armed with Kh-35 missiles, which
have a range of 130 km, in the anti-ship role. These missiles will
be replaced by the Brahmos cruise
missiles. Shtil (AKA SA-N-7
Gadfly) system is installed to counter airborne threats. The
Barak
point-defense missile system has been installed in INS Delhi and
will soon be installed in the other two ships of its class. These
destroyers also carry the RBU-6000 rockets
in the anti-submarine role and are provided with five 533 mm
torpedo launch tubes that can launch the SET-65E, Type 53-65
torpedoes. Another strength of these destroyers lies is the
capability to carry two Sea King helicopters. The Delhi
class will be augmented by the new Kolkata
class destroyers, the first of which was launched in March
2006.
The Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy has
recently commissioned a number of new modern destroyers in addition
to the four Sovremenny-class. Three new classes were launched since
2003, known as the Luyang,
Luyang
II and Luzhou
class. The latter two are armed with long range air defense
missiles, the indigenous HQ-9 and the Russian S-300 respectively.
It has been speculated that once the PLAN has been satisfied with
one of the two designs (either the 052C or 051C), it would be
selected for series production as the next generation of advanced
air defense destroyers for China.
Future destroyers
The last US Navy Spruance-class destroyer in service, USS Cushing, was decommissioned on September 21 2005. The Zumwalt class are planned to replace them; on November 1, 2001, the US Navy announced the issuance of a revised Request for Proposal (RFP) for the Future Surface Combatant Program. Formerly known as DD 21, the program will now be called DD(X) to more accurately reflect the program purpose, which is to produce a family of advanced technology surface combatants, not a single ship class. DD(X), also called Zumwalt class, is much larger than traditional destroyers, being nearly three thousand tons heavier than a Ticonderoga-class cruiser. It will potentially employ advanced weaponry and an all-electric Integrated Power System. With the retirement of the Spruance class, the Navy began commissioning an advanced variant of the Arleigh Burke class with expanded ASW capabilities, the Arleigh Burke Flight IIA, beginning with USS Oscar Austin. As of 2006, 22 of these vessels are in service, with at least seven more under construction.The current Royal Navy Type 42 destroyers are to
be replaced by the new Type
45 Daring-class from 2007 onwards. A class of 8 ships is
envisaged, with an entire programme budget of £6 billion although
at present only 6 have been ordered. Displacing around 7,200 tons,
they will be equipped with the UK variant of the Principal Anti-Air
Missile System (PAAMS) and BAE Systems
SAMPSON
radar. Design and construction of the first ships is split between
BAE Systems and Vosper
Thornycroft under the overall project management of BAE. The
ships are assembled at Scotstoun, by
BAE
Systems Naval Ships. HMS Daring, the first of her class, was
christened by Sophie, Countess of Wessex, and launched on the Clyde
on 1
February 2006.
The $5.2 billion CADRE (Command & Control and
Air-Defence Capability Replacement) project is meant to replace
Canada’s Iroquois
class destroyers whose primary role shifted to area air-defence
after TRUMP refits in the 1990s. Although the area air-defence
capability had not previously existed, the Canadian Navy now
regards “wide area air defence” as part of Canada’s core naval
capabilities. When the project began, Canadian Navy destroyers were
expected to need replacing by 2005, they are now expected to serve
until 2010. There was some work on a replacement design, known to
Navy-watchers as the Province
class destroyers, but this was confined largely to studies of a
much-improved multi-function three dimensional phased array
radar system being
developed in conjunction with the Dutch and German navies, known as
Active Phased Array Radar (APAR). Current speculation is that
the ships themselves would be similar to a "stretched" Halifax-class
frigate.
Notes
References
- Destroyers, Anthony Preston, Bison Books (London) 1977. ISBN 0-600-32955-0
- The First Destroyers / David Lyon - Caxton Editions, 1997 - ISBN 1840673648
- Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941, David C. Evans, Mark R.Peattie, Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland ISBN 0-87021-192-7
- The Origins of Japanese Trade Supremacy: Development and Technology in Asia from 1540 to the Pacific War, Christopher Howe, The University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-35485-7
- Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships (1860-1905): Gardiner, Robert (Ed.), Naval Institute Press, 1985.
- The Atlantic Campaign, Dan van der Vat.
- DD-963 Spruance-class
- Navy Designates Next-Generation Zumwalt Destroyer
External links
- The Japanese 1887 Kotaka (Japanese)
- The Spanish 1886 Destructor (Spanish)
- MaritimeQuest Minekaze Class Destroyer Class Overview
- USS Joseph P. Kennedy Photos on board the Destroyer Joseph P. Kennedy DD-780 in Fall River, MA
- USS Slater Photos on board the Destroyer Escort USS Slater DE-766 Museum in Albany, NY
destroyer in Bosnian: Razarač
destroyer in Czech: Torpédoborec
destroyer in Danish: Destroyer
destroyer in German: Zerstörer
destroyer in Estonian: Hävitaja
destroyer in Modern Greek (1453-):
Αντιτορπιλικό
destroyer in Spanish: Destructor
destroyer in Esperanto: Destrojero
destroyer in Persian: ناوشکن
destroyer in French: Destroyer
destroyer in Korean: 구축함
destroyer in Croatian: Razarač
destroyer in Indonesian: Kapal perusak
destroyer in Icelandic: Tundurspillir
destroyer in Italian: Cacciatorpediniere
destroyer in Hebrew: משחתת
destroyer in Lithuanian: Eskadrinis
minininkas
destroyer in Hungarian: Romboló
destroyer in Malay (macrolanguage): Kapal
pembinasa
destroyer in Dutch: Torpedobootjager
destroyer in Japanese: 駆逐艦
destroyer in Norwegian: Jager
destroyer in Polish: Niszczyciel
destroyer in Portuguese: Contratorpedeiro
destroyer in Russian: Эскадренный
миноносец
destroyer in Slovenian: Rušilec
destroyer in Serbian: Разарач
destroyer in Serbo-Croatian: Razarač
destroyer in Finnish: Hävittäjä (laiva)
destroyer in Swedish: Jagare
destroyer in Vietnamese: Tàu khu trục
destroyer in Turkish: Muhrip
destroyer in Ukrainian: Ескадрений
міноносець
destroyer in Chinese: 驱逐舰
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
animal,
annihilator,
anthropophagite,
arsonist, bane, barbarian, battleship, battlewagon, beast, biblioclast, bomber, brute, burner, can, cannibal, capital ship,
demolisher, despoiler, destruction, dynamitard, dynamiter, exterminator, hun, hyena, iconoclast, idol breaker,
idoloclast,
man-eater, nihilist,
ruin, ruination, ruiner, savage, shark, syndicalist, terrorist, tiger, undoing, vandal, wild man, wrecker