At the begin
ni
ng of the se
nte
nce a
nd if forms part of the proper
nou
n.
Examples:
Army Lieute
na
nt Campbell
Do you understa
nd, Army Lieute
na
nt?
Yes, "Army Lieutenant" is capitalized when referring to the rank of an officer in the U.S. Army.
Not unless a proper noun is after it.
Yes, ranks such as "Lieutenant" are typically capitalized when used before a person's name as a title. For example, "Lieutenant Smith attended the meeting."
The subordinate position or military rank is spelled lieutenant.(Examples : lieutenant governor, police lieutenant, lieutenant general. It is only capitalized when used as a title with the individual's name. It may be abbreviated LT or Lieut.)
The word "army" should be capitalized when it is used as part of a specific army's official title (e.g. United States Army). Otherwise, when used in a general sense (e.g. "The army marched through the desert"), it is not capitalized.
No, the word "army" is not always capitalized. It should only be capitalized when it is used as part of a proper noun or when it begins a sentence.
If you are referring to the U.S. Army and Air Force reserves, yes, they are known as the "National Guard." Actually U.S. Army Reserve and Air Force Reserve are federal reserve forces. Air and Army National Guard are state forces that can be federalized by the President.
Lieutenant Colonel. Always capitalized. Actually, only capitalize both words when used as part of a formal title, e.g. Lieutenant Colonel John Kurtz, US Army, or when used as a proper noun in place of an actual name, e.g. "We reported that the Captain had died to the Lieutenant Colonel" (where "Captain" and "Lieutenant Colonel" were specific people, not just generic ranks). In all other cases, the "L" should be capitalized (but the "C" should not) when it starts the beginning of a sentence. Neither should be capitalized when referring to the generic rank, e.g. "The meeting looked like a convocation of lieutenant colonels." Also, in that example, note how "lieutenant colonel" is puralized - adding an "s" to "colonel", not to "lieutenant".
The subordinate position or military rank is spelled lieutenant.(Examples : lieutenant governor, police lieutenant, lieutenant general. It is only capitalized when used as a title with the individual's name.)
Yes, ranks such as "Lieutenant" are typically capitalized when used before a person's name as a title. For example, "Lieutenant Smith attended the meeting."
The exact salary of sub-lieutenant in Indian army is INR 6000.
The starting salary of a lieutenant in the Pakistan army is 40,000 Pakistan rupees. An army chief in the Pakistan army makes 450000 Pakistan rupees.
british
you do the stuff they ask
In the British Army, Field Marshall is the highest rank. 2nd lieutenant Lieutenant Captain Major Lieutenant Colonel Colonel Brigadier Major General Lieutenant General General Field Marshall
The subordinate position or military rank is spelled lieutenant.(Examples : lieutenant governor, police lieutenant, lieutenant general. It is only capitalized when used as a title with the individual's name. It may be abbreviated LT or Lieut.)
First Lieutenant is a very common rank in the Army, and is held literally by thousands of service members.
In Flanders Fields was written by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae of the Canadian Army.
The subordinate position or military rank is spelled lieutenant.(Examples : lieutenant governor, police lieutenant, lieutenant general. It is only capitalized when used as a title with the individual's name. It may be abbreviated LT or Lieut.)