sergeant major
71Major (Sweden) — Överstelöjtnant Everstiluutnantti Swedish Army …
72Major general — For the 17th century Cromwellian regime, see Rule of the Major Generals. For the song in the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta Pirates of Penzance, see Major General s Song. Contents 1 Insignia 1.1 Army …
73Major — This article is about the military rank. For other uses, see Major (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Mayor. Maj redirects here. For the epic poem by Karel Hynek Mácha, see Máj. Common anglophone military ranks Navies Armies Air forces …
74sergeant — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. noncommissioned officer, NCO; staff sergeant, sergeant major, top sergeant, top [kick] (sl.), gunny (sl.), etc. See combatant. II (Roget s IV) n. Kinds of sergeants include: master sergeant, staff… …
75sergeant — n. 1 a non commissioned Army or Air Force officer next below warrant officer. 2 a police officer ranking below (Brit.) inspector or (US) captain. Phrases and idioms: company sergeant major Mil. the highest non commissioned officer of a company.… …
76sergeant — Synonyms and related words: G man, MP, NCO, acting corporal, acting sergeant, bailiff, beadle, beagle, bound bailiff, captain, catchpole, centurion, chief of police, chief warrant officer, color sergeant, commissioner, constable, corporal, deputy …
77Sergeant Frog — Keroro Gunsō (jap. ケロロ軍曹), auch unter dem englischen Titel Sgt. Frog bekannt, ist ein Comedy Manga des japanischen Zeichners Mine Yoshizaki, der auch als Anime Serie umgesetzt wird. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Handlung 2 Charaktere 2.1 Frösche …
78sergeant — n. 1) a buck; color; drill; first, top; flight (BE); gunnery; master; platoon; recruiting; staff; technical sergeant 2) a sergeant major * * * [ sɑːdʒ(ə)nt] color drill first gunnery master platoon …
79major — [16] Latin mājor ‘larger’ was the comparative form of magnus ‘large’, from which English gets magnitude, magnum etc (in early Latin it was *māgjōs). English originally acquired it as an adjective. Its noun use, for an army officer, followed in… …
80major — [16] Latin mājor ‘larger’ was the comparative form of magnus ‘large’, from which English gets magnitude, magnum etc (in early Latin it was *māgjōs). English originally acquired it as an adjective. Its noun use, for an army officer, followed in… …