fort leonard wood: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

Low
UK/fɔːt ˈlɛnəd wʊd/US/fɔːrt ˈlɛnərd wʊd/

Formal, Official, Military

My Flashcards

Quick answer

What does “fort leonard wood” mean?

A United States Army training installation located in the state of Missouri.

Audio

Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

A United States Army training installation located in the state of Missouri.

A major US Army center for training combat engineers, military police, chemical specialists, and other support personnel. It is also home to a basic training brigade and various other Army schools and commands.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

In British English, this is a foreign (American) military base name. Equivalent UK terms for military bases would use "Barracks," "Camp," or "Garrison." The word "Fort" is less common in UK base naming conventions.

Connotations

For a UK speaker, it connotes American military power and training. For a US speaker, it connotes Army basic training, engineering, and a specific geographic location in Missouri.

Frequency

The term is virtually non-existent in general British English usage. In American English, it has moderate frequency within military, veteran, and Missouri regional contexts.

Grammar

How to Use “fort leonard wood” in a Sentence

[Person/Unit] is/are stationed at Fort Leonard Wood.He completed his training at Fort Leonard Wood.The headquarters is located at Fort Leonard Wood.

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
US Armybasic trainingcombat engineersmilitary policestationed attraining at
medium
located in Missourigraduated fromassigned tovisitleave
weak
drive tomap ofnews fromweather at

Examples

Examples of “fort leonard wood” in a Sentence

verb

British English

  • N/A for proper noun

American English

  • N/A for proper noun

adverb

British English

  • N/A for proper noun

American English

  • N/A for proper noun

adjective

British English

  • N/A for proper noun

American English

  • N/A for proper noun

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

Rarely used outside of defense contracting contexts (e.g., 'The contract provides services for Fort Leonard Wood.')

Academic

Used in military history, geography, or political science papers discussing US military installations.

Everyday

Used by service members, veterans, and their families (e.g., 'My son is at Fort Leonard Wood for MP school.').

Technical

Used in official military documents, orders, and personnel tracking systems as a specific location code.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “fort leonard wood”

Strong

FLW (acronym)

Neutral

the basethe postthe installation

Weak

Missouri baseengineering school

Vocabulary

Antonyms of “fort leonard wood”

civilian lifenon-military location

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “fort leonard wood”

  • Misspelling as 'Fort Leonard Woods' (incorrect plural).
  • Confusing it with 'Fort Wood' (the base of the Statue of Liberty).
  • Using 'in' instead of 'at' (correct: 'He is stationed AT Fort Leonard Wood.').

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, it is an active United States Army training installation.

Its main purposes are conducting basic combat training and advanced individual training for combat engineers, military police, chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) specialists, and other related military occupational specialties.

Civilians can visit with appropriate sponsorship and base access procedures, typically for events like graduations or with a military ID card holder. Public access is restricted.

It is named after Major General Leonard Wood, a former Army Chief of Staff and Medal of Honor recipient. The 'Fort' designation is standard for many US Army installations.

A United States Army training installation located in the state of Missouri.

Fort leonard wood is usually formal, official, military in register.

Fort leonard wood: in British English it is pronounced /fɔːt ˈlɛnəd wʊd/, and in American English it is pronounced /fɔːrt ˈlɛnərd wʊd/. Tap the audio buttons above to hear it.

Phrases

Idioms & Phrases

  • Pushing Leonard Wood (slang for intense basic training experience)
  • A Leonard Wood winter (refers to harsh winter training conditions)

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Think: A FORT made of WOOD, built by a man named LEONARD, but now it's a huge Army training site.

Conceptual Metaphor

A FORTRESS OF KNOWLEDGE (for military trades); A GATEWAY TO THE ARMY (for new recruits).

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
New recruits for the Military Police Corps often report to for their advanced individual training.
Multiple Choice

Fort Leonard Wood is primarily known for training which of the following?

fort leonard wood: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples | Lingvocore