It stands for over
Can he still get promoted to the next rank (MAJ)? He just has one bad OER and seven outstanding OER's. This Bad OER was the second OER that he receive as a CPT. After that he has received six outstanding OER including his Company Command time OER. Rated time for the bad OER was 9 Months with two months unrated time.(Total of six months rated time) The OER received before this one was outstanding as well. He have a 10 months OER, 9 months OER, 7 months OER, 4 months OER, 12 months OER as company command, 8 months OER, 6 months OER and the last one was a 7 months OER. Right now he is waiting on the MAJ board results should be release some time this month. And this is my primary zone. Thank you all for your help!
I found two versions. One sung by Garrison Keillor (http://prairiehome.publicradio.org/programs/2004/05/29/scripts/starspangled.shtml) and a folk version by H. Paul Shuch (http://www.qsl.net/n6tx/poetry/walls/spangled.htm).
Bryn Oer Tramway ended in 1865.
Bryn Oer Tramway was created in 1815.
Theobald von Oer died in 1885.
Theobald von Oer was born in 1807.
"Oer" is the poetic license word for "over".
Maximilian Joseph Franz of Oer died in 1846.
Maximilian Joseph Franz of Oer was born in 1806.
war
oer
O'er, or oer...as in: "O'er the ramparts we marched..." a line from The Star Spangled Banner, the U.S. National Anthem. Just as "neath" is an abbreviated, antiquated--still used in poetry, songs, etc.--version of "beneath," "o'er is its opposite, to replace "over." Neath/Beneath/Under vs. O'er/Over/Above. Got it? I don't have time to do the etymology right now; but it is probably available in the Encarta World English Dictionary,--my recommendation as one of the best references available today--either online version or hardback (what I use mostly) which is found at a greatly reduced price at bookstores, probably online sellers as well due to the advent of online research. I wouldn't be without it. BTW, I'm a former teacher of English, published writer; degreed in field. My offhand choice for origins of "neath/o'er" would be the United Kingdom. ----