Absolutely not. It's covered under the fraternisation policy in Article 134, Paragraph 60, of the Uniformed Code of Military Justice.
It depends, if you are Marines then no. If you are in any other branch, you might be able to. If the officer you want to date is in your unit or whatever then no because that is fraternisation but if you two are in different units, you can.
No due to officer enlisted fratinization.
Generally, no.
Yes, if you have previously served as enlisted, the years you served will count and be added to your officer pay.
Bad, Bad Trouble looms on the horizon.
Fraternization is used to describe a personal relationship between an officer and an enlisted member that violates the customary bounds of acceptable behavior in the Air Force.
Normally, a salute is given to a senior ranking person who holds a commissioned status, meaning they are an officer, not a non-commissioned officer or petty officer. If military enlisted members go around saluting each other all the time, it would be a little strange, it is not a normal practice or custom.
Yes
Fraternization is used to describe a personal relationship between an officer and an enlisted member that violates the customary bounds of acceptable behavior in the Air Force.
'Enlisted navy officer' is not a designation. If you are enlisted, you are not an officer. An officer can apply for Medical school, whether they can remain on active duty or not will depend on the program they can get accepted to.
The officer to enlisted ratio in the Air Force can vary depending on factors such as branch, career field, and rank. On average, however, the officer to enlisted ratio in the Air Force is about 1:4. This means that for every officer, there are approximately four enlisted personnel.
It's actually a bit tricky, but no - the enlisted member should salute the approaching officer after the senior officer has returned the junior's salute or as the junior officer approaches, assuming the senior officer diverts attention from the enlisted to return a salute rather than just acknowledge the salute by a nod. The junior will then return the enlisted member's salute after the senior officer has returned the junior's salute, and the enlisted should hold the salute to the junior officer until returned by the junior officer. However, if the enlisted is engaged in conversation with the senior officer, it is disrespectful to divert attention away from a senior officer to an approaching junior officer to salute. When it occurs, it usually it happens simultaneously when the situation warrants. Most senior officers don't like to be interrupted during a formal conversation (and it's disrespectful to do so unless it's warranted), so most avoid the situation altogether. It depends on the setting as well, e.g., formal or informal, indoors (yes, salutes are rendered indoors at certain functions) or outdoors, etc. Most of the time if a senior officer is engaged in conversation with a junior (enlisted or otherwise), unless it's urgent, the officer wishing to speak to the senior will wait until the senior is finished. If just passing by, the junior may salute the senior, at which point the senior may either acknowledge the salute by a nod, or return if appropriate.
It depends on the situation. In virtually 99% of all cases, the enlisted member salutes the officer first. However, and though not specifically required by law or military regulation, the only exception is if the enlisted member is a Medal of Honor recipient; in that case, all ranks, junior and senior, are encouraged to salute the MOH recipient first as a matter of respect and courtesy.
Technically enlisted men always put enlisted at attention. Officers never yell; they conduct themselves as ladies and gentlemen. If an officer comes into a room the senior enlisted man will command "attention" or " officer on deck" and they will all come to attention.
An enlisted person in the military serves as a "worker" in the beginning and starts to manage and supervise as they go on. An officer commands and manages large group of enlisted servicemembers.