At least for the Navy and Marine Corps, emails are signed "Very Respectfully, RANK/ NAME" when addressing peers or senior officers/ billets, and signed 'Respectfully' when addressing junior officers/ billets.
SIR.
The association changed its name from The Retired Officers Association (TROA) to the Military Officers Association of America (MOAA), on January 1, 2003.
The term 'military officers' is a common noun, a word for any military officers of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Joint Chiefs of Staff, US ArmyMilitary Road NW, Washington, DC or Officers Lake Road, Meridian, MSCafe Military, Fort, Mumbai, MH, India or The Officers House, Haverfordwest, UK"The Officer's Wife", a novel by B. Sidney Smith or "Trinity: Military War Dog" by Ronie Kendig
Another name for elderly is "infirmed" In addition, ancestor, ancient, fore bearer, golden ager, matriarch, old, patriarch, senior, senior citizen, and veteran.
Yes You may be talking about a guy whose legal name is Junior. This is not usually the case. When a boy is named after his father, he will often sign his name with 'jr' at the end, and he is often called Junior as a nickname. Junior would be an unusual legal name, especially if it is his father's name as well. His father would be Junior Senior, and he would be Junior Junior. Imagine if their family name is Senior. they would be Junior Senior Senior, and Junior Senior Junior. If the son is in the military, he might be Major Junior Senior, Junior, Camp Jejune.
a person who is drafted into military service
In the context of interviewing military officers for my writing of magazine articles, I've been told that I may address an officer by first name, but that it's always safest to address an officer by rank and last name, as in "Commander Davis."
Conscription.
Answer: The "Armed Services"
Of course.
A military breastplate was a 'cuirass'