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Prior to his time in the British Secret Service, James Bond was a Royal Naval Reserve Commander, so as such he may be addressed as "Commander Bond".
Commander's Resource Integration System (CRIS)
Officers are addressed either by rank (Captain, Commander, etc.), or by Sir or Ma'am as the case may be. If you know the officer, it's customary to address them by rank and name (e.g., Commander Lawless). It depends on the circumstances as well, if it's in passing, in private, or a formal meeting, unit gathering, off duty, etc.
Commander Root. Or, maybe, Commander Sool. Or, Commander Vinyaya. Or, Commander Kelp.
"commander-in-chief" is what you are looking for.
what is more powerful L.T commander or a commander ?
You don't get a supreme commander in the game supreme commander 2.
No, the word commander is not an adverb.The word commander is in fact a noun.
No. Commander is a job title (e.g., Company Commander, Battalion Commander, Brigade Commander, Division Commander, Corps Commander, etc.), but not a rank. Lieutenant Commander and Commander exist as ranks only in the Navy. Lieutenant Commander is equivalent to a Major in the Army, Air Force, and Marines, and Commander is equivalent is Lieutenant Colonel in the Army, Air Force, and Marines.
Either truck commander or tank commander.
Commander Sigsbee
The rank of "Commodore" is an honorary one, not an actual Navy rank (at least not in today's Navy). A Commodore is a Senior Navy Captain who is a Squadron Commander of a group of ships, submarines, aircraft, etc. Though the officer is addressed as "Commodore", he/she still wears the rank of Captain.