A female superior officer can be adressed by Ma'am or by their rank as well. (ex. Yes ma'am. Yes staff sergeant etc...)
Female military officers are referred to as Ma'am. All junior naval officers are referred to as Mister or by their rank by their superior officers.
No, you call her Ma'am.
So accept defeat Micheal.
A Warrent Officer is usually a skilled technician, and are often slotted as Maintence Officers. It is an intermediate in rank between a noncommissioned officer and a commissioned officer, having authority by virtue of a warrant. He is saluted by enlisted persons and can use the Officers Club.
you call then SIR or MA'AM and move on
A Naval Academy grad would call a West Point grad the same thing any officer would call another. They would call each other "Mr. (last name)" and if appropriate would use "Sir" as a sign of respect.
If your name is Sergeant Smith, you salute the officer and say, "Sir, Sergeant Smith reporting as ordered."
that would depend on his rank or just 'sir'. Nothing in the question implies addressing or TALKING about an officer nor WHAT army is involved...........It also depends on whether you are addressing him, or talking about him.In the British army, officers are addressed as Sir, but referred to as Ruperts.
They can call them whatever they want pretty much. Usually by last name though. They don't have to refer to them as sir since that officer is a higher rank. The lower ranking officer has to say "Their Motto" Sir, and then salute.
Sir French Sincarllinny
You address him as "Sir" and brace up to the position of attention however you do not salute.AnswerIt depends who you are. If you hold a lower rank, then you call him 'Sir'. If you are of higher rank, then you call him 'Mr Smith' or whatever his name is!
No, you say "Ma'am" or refer to them by their rank.
Sir Robert Eric Mortimer Wheeler was British, an archaeologist and was once an officer in the British Army.
In the military a male officer would be adressed as "sir" and a female oficer addressed as "ma'am" To address a female officer as sir would be a serious faux pas.The formal mode of address to a lady would be 'madam' oftenshortened to Ma'am. Some discretion should be used before addressing a lady as 'madam'. In some areas of society, the word madam may have dubious connotations
When speaking to a male military officer = lo hafaked (לא הפקד)When speaking to a female military officer = lo hafakedet (לא הפקדת)