What do you call it when your unit does physical exercise as punishment because one soldier did something...
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I served in the Russian military and we weren't allowed to use our phones when we were on duty. So whenever someone was noticed using their phone, the whole unit had to do push-ups, squats, etc.
In Russian the term for it is "качать", it's a verb, meaning to "buff up", our sergeants thought that if we don't get these rules through our heads, we will get them through our arms/legs. Is there a similar term in English?
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I served in the Russian military and we weren't allowed to use our phones when we were on duty. So whenever someone was noticed using their phone, the whole unit had to do push-ups, squats, etc.
In Russian the term for it is "качать", it's a verb, meaning to "buff up", our sergeants thought that if we don't get these rules through our heads, we will get them through our arms/legs. Is there a similar term in English?
single-word-requests translation military
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up vote
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up vote
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I served in the Russian military and we weren't allowed to use our phones when we were on duty. So whenever someone was noticed using their phone, the whole unit had to do push-ups, squats, etc.
In Russian the term for it is "качать", it's a verb, meaning to "buff up", our sergeants thought that if we don't get these rules through our heads, we will get them through our arms/legs. Is there a similar term in English?
single-word-requests translation military
New contributor
I served in the Russian military and we weren't allowed to use our phones when we were on duty. So whenever someone was noticed using their phone, the whole unit had to do push-ups, squats, etc.
In Russian the term for it is "качать", it's a verb, meaning to "buff up", our sergeants thought that if we don't get these rules through our heads, we will get them through our arms/legs. Is there a similar term in English?
single-word-requests translation military
single-word-requests translation military
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4 Answers
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collective punishment is the term you're looking for and it has been practised since ancient times whenever a whole group is punished for the acts of one.
Examples of collective punishment:
During the finals of the national Dutch cup in April 2014, a few Ajax supporters interrupted the game by throwing fireworks on the field, and they inflicted severe damage to several areas of the soccer stadium. Although the damage was caused by only a handful of hooligans, the entire club was subsequently fined with €70’000, and the decision was made to ban all supporters—including the innocent majority—from attending the future games between these two teams for the following three years. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
During WWII: During the Nazi occupation of Poland, the Germans applied collective responsibility: any kind of help given to a person of Jewish faith or origin was punishable by death, and that not only for the rescuers themselves but also for their families. This was widely publicized by the Germans. During the occupation, for every German killed by a Pole, 100–400 Poles were shot in retribution. Wikipedia
In 16th Century China: During the Ming dynasty of China, 16 palace women attempted to assassinate the Jiajing Emperor. All were sentenced to death by slow slicing. Ten members of the women's families were also beheaded, while a further 20 were enslaved and gifted to ministers. Wikipedia
Examples of collective punishment are often found in classrooms, among the military, during embargos, wars, etc.
It's worth adding that under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime.
It is worth noting that collective punishment is against the Geneva Convention and may be against the UN Declaration of Human Rights. I say maybe because I am unsure whether special latitude is allowed in the military.
– Tuffy
3 hours ago
@Tuffy It depends on which country you're talking about. "Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. Additional Protocol II of 1977 explicitly forbids collective punishment. Wikipedia
– Centaurus
3 hours ago
1
The 4th Geneva Convention deals with the protection of civilians in a war zone. It has nothing to do with how the military treats its own soldiers.
– michael.hor257k
2 hours ago
@michael.hor257k I never said it does.
– Centaurus
2 hours ago
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In the US military, smoking is a general term for physical punishment, although not necessarily collective punishment, as in your example.
A Wikipedia glossary of military slang has the following entry:
smoke (verb)
(U.S. Army)
Term to describe punishment of minor offenses by means of excessive physical training.
Usage: "The drill instructor smoked me for talking back."
See U.S. Marine Corps term Thrashed
This seems to be an interesting niche preservation of an otherwise obsolete sense of the verb, smoke.
According to Merriam-Webster:
smoke verb
smoked; smoking
intransitive verb
...
2 archaic: to undergo punishment: cf suffer
Disciplining an entire unit, much as you describe in your example, can be termed a smoke session, as we can see in this excerpt from a US Army document entitled Corrective Training/Corrective Action Guide for Leaders:
Leaders must exercise good judgment in the administration of
corrective action. Corrective action may be applied to entire units if
appropriate (correcting an entire platoon failing to show teamwork
during Red Phase in a given training event by having them do five
repetitions of the pushup, for example), but will be focused at the
individual level whenever possible. Improper use can lead to
unauthorized mass punishment or hazing. Do not refer to this type of
administrative corrective measure as "smoking" or "smoke sessions;"
such references give the impression that these measures are punitive
or oppressive.
Urban Dictionary also has an entry for smoke session. Well, it has several. Here's the relevant one:
Smoke Session
A term originating in military recruit training, which refers to an intense physical training session, usually initiated as a form of punishment for minor infractions, where one or more individuals typically do rigorous physical activity until exhaustion and/or muscle failure.
Bro, it was a total smoke session last night after drill sergeant Wilson caught Roberts sleeping during fire watch!
Also, as mentioned in the glossary quoted above, thrashed (or perhaps thrash) is apparently a similar term in use in the US Marines:
Thrashed
(U.S. Marine Corps)
An extreme physical exercise routine ordered by DIs upon a recruit or Platoon for making a mistake which could last until complete
exhaustion. Puddles of sweat are often the end result.
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An informal term for punishing a soldier with physical exercise is 'to smoke' the soldier. It means to make the soldier exercise until he is exhausted, and then make him exercise more.
"The sergeant smoked me for for being late to formation."
"He used his phone, so the sergeant smoked the whole squad."
The connotation is that the sergeant is making the soldiers do so much physical exercise that they burn up or start smoking, rather than smoke them like a cigarette.
Getting smoked is not a light punishment. To punish a soldier or a group of soldiers for a minor violation, the sergeant would make them 'do PT', as in do physical training.
'Do PT' normally describes ordinary physical fitness training, but it also refers to punishment if the soldiers are ordered to do physical training as a punishment.
"He used his phone, so the sergeant made us do PT for an hour."
You can also say "PT" by itself.
"If the sergeant catches of them with a phone again, he will PT them to death."
New contributor
1
As a hint on our site's expectations, note how tmgr's post also covers smoke, but includes authoritative references to back up their answer. The supporting evidence distinguishes an answer suitable for EL&U from a personal opinion more suitable to a forum. Why not edit your answer to provide a reference for "PT"? For further guidance, see How to Answer :-)
– Chappo
2 hours ago
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In British military slang a semi-formal word used for extreme punishment of an individual is called a Beasting
In general a group historically may have been "fizzed" generally subjected to "gravel bashing" (square bashing)
In Singapore a recent common term “Standby Universe” for a specific group task that may have to be repeatedly carried out from bunk to square, especially if something is stun (q.v. same link.)
An individual may be subject of "Blanket Party" as a form of hazing (bullying).
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4 Answers
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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up vote
4
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collective punishment is the term you're looking for and it has been practised since ancient times whenever a whole group is punished for the acts of one.
Examples of collective punishment:
During the finals of the national Dutch cup in April 2014, a few Ajax supporters interrupted the game by throwing fireworks on the field, and they inflicted severe damage to several areas of the soccer stadium. Although the damage was caused by only a handful of hooligans, the entire club was subsequently fined with €70’000, and the decision was made to ban all supporters—including the innocent majority—from attending the future games between these two teams for the following three years. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
During WWII: During the Nazi occupation of Poland, the Germans applied collective responsibility: any kind of help given to a person of Jewish faith or origin was punishable by death, and that not only for the rescuers themselves but also for their families. This was widely publicized by the Germans. During the occupation, for every German killed by a Pole, 100–400 Poles were shot in retribution. Wikipedia
In 16th Century China: During the Ming dynasty of China, 16 palace women attempted to assassinate the Jiajing Emperor. All were sentenced to death by slow slicing. Ten members of the women's families were also beheaded, while a further 20 were enslaved and gifted to ministers. Wikipedia
Examples of collective punishment are often found in classrooms, among the military, during embargos, wars, etc.
It's worth adding that under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime.
It is worth noting that collective punishment is against the Geneva Convention and may be against the UN Declaration of Human Rights. I say maybe because I am unsure whether special latitude is allowed in the military.
– Tuffy
3 hours ago
@Tuffy It depends on which country you're talking about. "Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. Additional Protocol II of 1977 explicitly forbids collective punishment. Wikipedia
– Centaurus
3 hours ago
1
The 4th Geneva Convention deals with the protection of civilians in a war zone. It has nothing to do with how the military treats its own soldiers.
– michael.hor257k
2 hours ago
@michael.hor257k I never said it does.
– Centaurus
2 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
collective punishment is the term you're looking for and it has been practised since ancient times whenever a whole group is punished for the acts of one.
Examples of collective punishment:
During the finals of the national Dutch cup in April 2014, a few Ajax supporters interrupted the game by throwing fireworks on the field, and they inflicted severe damage to several areas of the soccer stadium. Although the damage was caused by only a handful of hooligans, the entire club was subsequently fined with €70’000, and the decision was made to ban all supporters—including the innocent majority—from attending the future games between these two teams for the following three years. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
During WWII: During the Nazi occupation of Poland, the Germans applied collective responsibility: any kind of help given to a person of Jewish faith or origin was punishable by death, and that not only for the rescuers themselves but also for their families. This was widely publicized by the Germans. During the occupation, for every German killed by a Pole, 100–400 Poles were shot in retribution. Wikipedia
In 16th Century China: During the Ming dynasty of China, 16 palace women attempted to assassinate the Jiajing Emperor. All were sentenced to death by slow slicing. Ten members of the women's families were also beheaded, while a further 20 were enslaved and gifted to ministers. Wikipedia
Examples of collective punishment are often found in classrooms, among the military, during embargos, wars, etc.
It's worth adding that under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime.
It is worth noting that collective punishment is against the Geneva Convention and may be against the UN Declaration of Human Rights. I say maybe because I am unsure whether special latitude is allowed in the military.
– Tuffy
3 hours ago
@Tuffy It depends on which country you're talking about. "Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. Additional Protocol II of 1977 explicitly forbids collective punishment. Wikipedia
– Centaurus
3 hours ago
1
The 4th Geneva Convention deals with the protection of civilians in a war zone. It has nothing to do with how the military treats its own soldiers.
– michael.hor257k
2 hours ago
@michael.hor257k I never said it does.
– Centaurus
2 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
collective punishment is the term you're looking for and it has been practised since ancient times whenever a whole group is punished for the acts of one.
Examples of collective punishment:
During the finals of the national Dutch cup in April 2014, a few Ajax supporters interrupted the game by throwing fireworks on the field, and they inflicted severe damage to several areas of the soccer stadium. Although the damage was caused by only a handful of hooligans, the entire club was subsequently fined with €70’000, and the decision was made to ban all supporters—including the innocent majority—from attending the future games between these two teams for the following three years. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
During WWII: During the Nazi occupation of Poland, the Germans applied collective responsibility: any kind of help given to a person of Jewish faith or origin was punishable by death, and that not only for the rescuers themselves but also for their families. This was widely publicized by the Germans. During the occupation, for every German killed by a Pole, 100–400 Poles were shot in retribution. Wikipedia
In 16th Century China: During the Ming dynasty of China, 16 palace women attempted to assassinate the Jiajing Emperor. All were sentenced to death by slow slicing. Ten members of the women's families were also beheaded, while a further 20 were enslaved and gifted to ministers. Wikipedia
Examples of collective punishment are often found in classrooms, among the military, during embargos, wars, etc.
It's worth adding that under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime.
collective punishment is the term you're looking for and it has been practised since ancient times whenever a whole group is punished for the acts of one.
Examples of collective punishment:
During the finals of the national Dutch cup in April 2014, a few Ajax supporters interrupted the game by throwing fireworks on the field, and they inflicted severe damage to several areas of the soccer stadium. Although the damage was caused by only a handful of hooligans, the entire club was subsequently fined with €70’000, and the decision was made to ban all supporters—including the innocent majority—from attending the future games between these two teams for the following three years. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
During WWII: During the Nazi occupation of Poland, the Germans applied collective responsibility: any kind of help given to a person of Jewish faith or origin was punishable by death, and that not only for the rescuers themselves but also for their families. This was widely publicized by the Germans. During the occupation, for every German killed by a Pole, 100–400 Poles were shot in retribution. Wikipedia
In 16th Century China: During the Ming dynasty of China, 16 palace women attempted to assassinate the Jiajing Emperor. All were sentenced to death by slow slicing. Ten members of the women's families were also beheaded, while a further 20 were enslaved and gifted to ministers. Wikipedia
Examples of collective punishment are often found in classrooms, among the military, during embargos, wars, etc.
It's worth adding that under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime.
edited 3 hours ago
answered 3 hours ago
Centaurus
37.6k27120242
37.6k27120242
It is worth noting that collective punishment is against the Geneva Convention and may be against the UN Declaration of Human Rights. I say maybe because I am unsure whether special latitude is allowed in the military.
– Tuffy
3 hours ago
@Tuffy It depends on which country you're talking about. "Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. Additional Protocol II of 1977 explicitly forbids collective punishment. Wikipedia
– Centaurus
3 hours ago
1
The 4th Geneva Convention deals with the protection of civilians in a war zone. It has nothing to do with how the military treats its own soldiers.
– michael.hor257k
2 hours ago
@michael.hor257k I never said it does.
– Centaurus
2 hours ago
add a comment |
It is worth noting that collective punishment is against the Geneva Convention and may be against the UN Declaration of Human Rights. I say maybe because I am unsure whether special latitude is allowed in the military.
– Tuffy
3 hours ago
@Tuffy It depends on which country you're talking about. "Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. Additional Protocol II of 1977 explicitly forbids collective punishment. Wikipedia
– Centaurus
3 hours ago
1
The 4th Geneva Convention deals with the protection of civilians in a war zone. It has nothing to do with how the military treats its own soldiers.
– michael.hor257k
2 hours ago
@michael.hor257k I never said it does.
– Centaurus
2 hours ago
It is worth noting that collective punishment is against the Geneva Convention and may be against the UN Declaration of Human Rights. I say maybe because I am unsure whether special latitude is allowed in the military.
– Tuffy
3 hours ago
It is worth noting that collective punishment is against the Geneva Convention and may be against the UN Declaration of Human Rights. I say maybe because I am unsure whether special latitude is allowed in the military.
– Tuffy
3 hours ago
@Tuffy It depends on which country you're talking about. "Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. Additional Protocol II of 1977 explicitly forbids collective punishment. Wikipedia
– Centaurus
3 hours ago
@Tuffy It depends on which country you're talking about. "Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. Additional Protocol II of 1977 explicitly forbids collective punishment. Wikipedia
– Centaurus
3 hours ago
1
1
The 4th Geneva Convention deals with the protection of civilians in a war zone. It has nothing to do with how the military treats its own soldiers.
– michael.hor257k
2 hours ago
The 4th Geneva Convention deals with the protection of civilians in a war zone. It has nothing to do with how the military treats its own soldiers.
– michael.hor257k
2 hours ago
@michael.hor257k I never said it does.
– Centaurus
2 hours ago
@michael.hor257k I never said it does.
– Centaurus
2 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
In the US military, smoking is a general term for physical punishment, although not necessarily collective punishment, as in your example.
A Wikipedia glossary of military slang has the following entry:
smoke (verb)
(U.S. Army)
Term to describe punishment of minor offenses by means of excessive physical training.
Usage: "The drill instructor smoked me for talking back."
See U.S. Marine Corps term Thrashed
This seems to be an interesting niche preservation of an otherwise obsolete sense of the verb, smoke.
According to Merriam-Webster:
smoke verb
smoked; smoking
intransitive verb
...
2 archaic: to undergo punishment: cf suffer
Disciplining an entire unit, much as you describe in your example, can be termed a smoke session, as we can see in this excerpt from a US Army document entitled Corrective Training/Corrective Action Guide for Leaders:
Leaders must exercise good judgment in the administration of
corrective action. Corrective action may be applied to entire units if
appropriate (correcting an entire platoon failing to show teamwork
during Red Phase in a given training event by having them do five
repetitions of the pushup, for example), but will be focused at the
individual level whenever possible. Improper use can lead to
unauthorized mass punishment or hazing. Do not refer to this type of
administrative corrective measure as "smoking" or "smoke sessions;"
such references give the impression that these measures are punitive
or oppressive.
Urban Dictionary also has an entry for smoke session. Well, it has several. Here's the relevant one:
Smoke Session
A term originating in military recruit training, which refers to an intense physical training session, usually initiated as a form of punishment for minor infractions, where one or more individuals typically do rigorous physical activity until exhaustion and/or muscle failure.
Bro, it was a total smoke session last night after drill sergeant Wilson caught Roberts sleeping during fire watch!
Also, as mentioned in the glossary quoted above, thrashed (or perhaps thrash) is apparently a similar term in use in the US Marines:
Thrashed
(U.S. Marine Corps)
An extreme physical exercise routine ordered by DIs upon a recruit or Platoon for making a mistake which could last until complete
exhaustion. Puddles of sweat are often the end result.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
In the US military, smoking is a general term for physical punishment, although not necessarily collective punishment, as in your example.
A Wikipedia glossary of military slang has the following entry:
smoke (verb)
(U.S. Army)
Term to describe punishment of minor offenses by means of excessive physical training.
Usage: "The drill instructor smoked me for talking back."
See U.S. Marine Corps term Thrashed
This seems to be an interesting niche preservation of an otherwise obsolete sense of the verb, smoke.
According to Merriam-Webster:
smoke verb
smoked; smoking
intransitive verb
...
2 archaic: to undergo punishment: cf suffer
Disciplining an entire unit, much as you describe in your example, can be termed a smoke session, as we can see in this excerpt from a US Army document entitled Corrective Training/Corrective Action Guide for Leaders:
Leaders must exercise good judgment in the administration of
corrective action. Corrective action may be applied to entire units if
appropriate (correcting an entire platoon failing to show teamwork
during Red Phase in a given training event by having them do five
repetitions of the pushup, for example), but will be focused at the
individual level whenever possible. Improper use can lead to
unauthorized mass punishment or hazing. Do not refer to this type of
administrative corrective measure as "smoking" or "smoke sessions;"
such references give the impression that these measures are punitive
or oppressive.
Urban Dictionary also has an entry for smoke session. Well, it has several. Here's the relevant one:
Smoke Session
A term originating in military recruit training, which refers to an intense physical training session, usually initiated as a form of punishment for minor infractions, where one or more individuals typically do rigorous physical activity until exhaustion and/or muscle failure.
Bro, it was a total smoke session last night after drill sergeant Wilson caught Roberts sleeping during fire watch!
Also, as mentioned in the glossary quoted above, thrashed (or perhaps thrash) is apparently a similar term in use in the US Marines:
Thrashed
(U.S. Marine Corps)
An extreme physical exercise routine ordered by DIs upon a recruit or Platoon for making a mistake which could last until complete
exhaustion. Puddles of sweat are often the end result.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
In the US military, smoking is a general term for physical punishment, although not necessarily collective punishment, as in your example.
A Wikipedia glossary of military slang has the following entry:
smoke (verb)
(U.S. Army)
Term to describe punishment of minor offenses by means of excessive physical training.
Usage: "The drill instructor smoked me for talking back."
See U.S. Marine Corps term Thrashed
This seems to be an interesting niche preservation of an otherwise obsolete sense of the verb, smoke.
According to Merriam-Webster:
smoke verb
smoked; smoking
intransitive verb
...
2 archaic: to undergo punishment: cf suffer
Disciplining an entire unit, much as you describe in your example, can be termed a smoke session, as we can see in this excerpt from a US Army document entitled Corrective Training/Corrective Action Guide for Leaders:
Leaders must exercise good judgment in the administration of
corrective action. Corrective action may be applied to entire units if
appropriate (correcting an entire platoon failing to show teamwork
during Red Phase in a given training event by having them do five
repetitions of the pushup, for example), but will be focused at the
individual level whenever possible. Improper use can lead to
unauthorized mass punishment or hazing. Do not refer to this type of
administrative corrective measure as "smoking" or "smoke sessions;"
such references give the impression that these measures are punitive
or oppressive.
Urban Dictionary also has an entry for smoke session. Well, it has several. Here's the relevant one:
Smoke Session
A term originating in military recruit training, which refers to an intense physical training session, usually initiated as a form of punishment for minor infractions, where one or more individuals typically do rigorous physical activity until exhaustion and/or muscle failure.
Bro, it was a total smoke session last night after drill sergeant Wilson caught Roberts sleeping during fire watch!
Also, as mentioned in the glossary quoted above, thrashed (or perhaps thrash) is apparently a similar term in use in the US Marines:
Thrashed
(U.S. Marine Corps)
An extreme physical exercise routine ordered by DIs upon a recruit or Platoon for making a mistake which could last until complete
exhaustion. Puddles of sweat are often the end result.
In the US military, smoking is a general term for physical punishment, although not necessarily collective punishment, as in your example.
A Wikipedia glossary of military slang has the following entry:
smoke (verb)
(U.S. Army)
Term to describe punishment of minor offenses by means of excessive physical training.
Usage: "The drill instructor smoked me for talking back."
See U.S. Marine Corps term Thrashed
This seems to be an interesting niche preservation of an otherwise obsolete sense of the verb, smoke.
According to Merriam-Webster:
smoke verb
smoked; smoking
intransitive verb
...
2 archaic: to undergo punishment: cf suffer
Disciplining an entire unit, much as you describe in your example, can be termed a smoke session, as we can see in this excerpt from a US Army document entitled Corrective Training/Corrective Action Guide for Leaders:
Leaders must exercise good judgment in the administration of
corrective action. Corrective action may be applied to entire units if
appropriate (correcting an entire platoon failing to show teamwork
during Red Phase in a given training event by having them do five
repetitions of the pushup, for example), but will be focused at the
individual level whenever possible. Improper use can lead to
unauthorized mass punishment or hazing. Do not refer to this type of
administrative corrective measure as "smoking" or "smoke sessions;"
such references give the impression that these measures are punitive
or oppressive.
Urban Dictionary also has an entry for smoke session. Well, it has several. Here's the relevant one:
Smoke Session
A term originating in military recruit training, which refers to an intense physical training session, usually initiated as a form of punishment for minor infractions, where one or more individuals typically do rigorous physical activity until exhaustion and/or muscle failure.
Bro, it was a total smoke session last night after drill sergeant Wilson caught Roberts sleeping during fire watch!
Also, as mentioned in the glossary quoted above, thrashed (or perhaps thrash) is apparently a similar term in use in the US Marines:
Thrashed
(U.S. Marine Corps)
An extreme physical exercise routine ordered by DIs upon a recruit or Platoon for making a mistake which could last until complete
exhaustion. Puddles of sweat are often the end result.
answered 3 hours ago
tmgr
2,2521820
2,2521820
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An informal term for punishing a soldier with physical exercise is 'to smoke' the soldier. It means to make the soldier exercise until he is exhausted, and then make him exercise more.
"The sergeant smoked me for for being late to formation."
"He used his phone, so the sergeant smoked the whole squad."
The connotation is that the sergeant is making the soldiers do so much physical exercise that they burn up or start smoking, rather than smoke them like a cigarette.
Getting smoked is not a light punishment. To punish a soldier or a group of soldiers for a minor violation, the sergeant would make them 'do PT', as in do physical training.
'Do PT' normally describes ordinary physical fitness training, but it also refers to punishment if the soldiers are ordered to do physical training as a punishment.
"He used his phone, so the sergeant made us do PT for an hour."
You can also say "PT" by itself.
"If the sergeant catches of them with a phone again, he will PT them to death."
New contributor
1
As a hint on our site's expectations, note how tmgr's post also covers smoke, but includes authoritative references to back up their answer. The supporting evidence distinguishes an answer suitable for EL&U from a personal opinion more suitable to a forum. Why not edit your answer to provide a reference for "PT"? For further guidance, see How to Answer :-)
– Chappo
2 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
An informal term for punishing a soldier with physical exercise is 'to smoke' the soldier. It means to make the soldier exercise until he is exhausted, and then make him exercise more.
"The sergeant smoked me for for being late to formation."
"He used his phone, so the sergeant smoked the whole squad."
The connotation is that the sergeant is making the soldiers do so much physical exercise that they burn up or start smoking, rather than smoke them like a cigarette.
Getting smoked is not a light punishment. To punish a soldier or a group of soldiers for a minor violation, the sergeant would make them 'do PT', as in do physical training.
'Do PT' normally describes ordinary physical fitness training, but it also refers to punishment if the soldiers are ordered to do physical training as a punishment.
"He used his phone, so the sergeant made us do PT for an hour."
You can also say "PT" by itself.
"If the sergeant catches of them with a phone again, he will PT them to death."
New contributor
1
As a hint on our site's expectations, note how tmgr's post also covers smoke, but includes authoritative references to back up their answer. The supporting evidence distinguishes an answer suitable for EL&U from a personal opinion more suitable to a forum. Why not edit your answer to provide a reference for "PT"? For further guidance, see How to Answer :-)
– Chappo
2 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
An informal term for punishing a soldier with physical exercise is 'to smoke' the soldier. It means to make the soldier exercise until he is exhausted, and then make him exercise more.
"The sergeant smoked me for for being late to formation."
"He used his phone, so the sergeant smoked the whole squad."
The connotation is that the sergeant is making the soldiers do so much physical exercise that they burn up or start smoking, rather than smoke them like a cigarette.
Getting smoked is not a light punishment. To punish a soldier or a group of soldiers for a minor violation, the sergeant would make them 'do PT', as in do physical training.
'Do PT' normally describes ordinary physical fitness training, but it also refers to punishment if the soldiers are ordered to do physical training as a punishment.
"He used his phone, so the sergeant made us do PT for an hour."
You can also say "PT" by itself.
"If the sergeant catches of them with a phone again, he will PT them to death."
New contributor
An informal term for punishing a soldier with physical exercise is 'to smoke' the soldier. It means to make the soldier exercise until he is exhausted, and then make him exercise more.
"The sergeant smoked me for for being late to formation."
"He used his phone, so the sergeant smoked the whole squad."
The connotation is that the sergeant is making the soldiers do so much physical exercise that they burn up or start smoking, rather than smoke them like a cigarette.
Getting smoked is not a light punishment. To punish a soldier or a group of soldiers for a minor violation, the sergeant would make them 'do PT', as in do physical training.
'Do PT' normally describes ordinary physical fitness training, but it also refers to punishment if the soldiers are ordered to do physical training as a punishment.
"He used his phone, so the sergeant made us do PT for an hour."
You can also say "PT" by itself.
"If the sergeant catches of them with a phone again, he will PT them to death."
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answered 3 hours ago
TheLeopard
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As a hint on our site's expectations, note how tmgr's post also covers smoke, but includes authoritative references to back up their answer. The supporting evidence distinguishes an answer suitable for EL&U from a personal opinion more suitable to a forum. Why not edit your answer to provide a reference for "PT"? For further guidance, see How to Answer :-)
– Chappo
2 hours ago
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As a hint on our site's expectations, note how tmgr's post also covers smoke, but includes authoritative references to back up their answer. The supporting evidence distinguishes an answer suitable for EL&U from a personal opinion more suitable to a forum. Why not edit your answer to provide a reference for "PT"? For further guidance, see How to Answer :-)
– Chappo
2 hours ago
1
1
As a hint on our site's expectations, note how tmgr's post also covers smoke, but includes authoritative references to back up their answer. The supporting evidence distinguishes an answer suitable for EL&U from a personal opinion more suitable to a forum. Why not edit your answer to provide a reference for "PT"? For further guidance, see How to Answer :-)
– Chappo
2 hours ago
As a hint on our site's expectations, note how tmgr's post also covers smoke, but includes authoritative references to back up their answer. The supporting evidence distinguishes an answer suitable for EL&U from a personal opinion more suitable to a forum. Why not edit your answer to provide a reference for "PT"? For further guidance, see How to Answer :-)
– Chappo
2 hours ago
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In British military slang a semi-formal word used for extreme punishment of an individual is called a Beasting
In general a group historically may have been "fizzed" generally subjected to "gravel bashing" (square bashing)
In Singapore a recent common term “Standby Universe” for a specific group task that may have to be repeatedly carried out from bunk to square, especially if something is stun (q.v. same link.)
An individual may be subject of "Blanket Party" as a form of hazing (bullying).
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In British military slang a semi-formal word used for extreme punishment of an individual is called a Beasting
In general a group historically may have been "fizzed" generally subjected to "gravel bashing" (square bashing)
In Singapore a recent common term “Standby Universe” for a specific group task that may have to be repeatedly carried out from bunk to square, especially if something is stun (q.v. same link.)
An individual may be subject of "Blanket Party" as a form of hazing (bullying).
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
In British military slang a semi-formal word used for extreme punishment of an individual is called a Beasting
In general a group historically may have been "fizzed" generally subjected to "gravel bashing" (square bashing)
In Singapore a recent common term “Standby Universe” for a specific group task that may have to be repeatedly carried out from bunk to square, especially if something is stun (q.v. same link.)
An individual may be subject of "Blanket Party" as a form of hazing (bullying).
In British military slang a semi-formal word used for extreme punishment of an individual is called a Beasting
In general a group historically may have been "fizzed" generally subjected to "gravel bashing" (square bashing)
In Singapore a recent common term “Standby Universe” for a specific group task that may have to be repeatedly carried out from bunk to square, especially if something is stun (q.v. same link.)
An individual may be subject of "Blanket Party" as a form of hazing (bullying).
answered 47 mins ago
KJO
1,987313
1,987313
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