11B denotes infantry rifleman. 2 is his rank sergeant. and the V signifies he's in a Ranger Batt. so he's an E-5 infantryman in a Ranger Battalion.
The MOS of 812 designates a heavy weapons man, in particular an nco. This was effctive July 1944 for the US Army.
If you mean that if you are out of the country for 6 months or more are you still a citizen. Yes, you are.
The Military Occupational Specialty or MOS for a cook in the US Marines is 3381 ~ see related link below .
MOS would be most interchangeable with Rate in the navy. Rate is pretty much another word for job specialty as is mos. Rate may also be referred to as a NEC.
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M1A1 Abrahms Tank.
Mos tof us wonder that but you can not.
That depends entirely on their MOS.
You go to your MOS (Military Occupational Specialty) school.
Presuming you mean "chief", the highest ranking officer in the British army is called a Brigadier.
11B is the actual MOS. 11 is the Career Management Field - 11 Series is Infantry Branch, and the "B" indicates that the person is enlisted, and may be serving as Light Infantry, Mechanized Infantry, Motorized Infantry, or as a TOW anti-tank crew member. Infantry officers have the MOS of 11A and mortar crew members have the MOS of 11C. The next bit is a bit confusing to me, because it seems a bit off. "2" is supposed to be the skill level - a Skill Level Identifier of 2 indicates a service member with the rank of Sergeant/pay grade of E5. After the Skill Level Identifier comes the Special Qualification Identifier (e.g., Airborne, Airborne Ranger, etc.), and then the Additional Skill Identifiers. The problem is that there is no "T" Special Qualification Identifier, and "2T" (in which case, they'd have left out the Skill Level Identifier) is an Additional Skill Identifier for a TENCAP Data Analyst - not something an infantryman would have.... So the 11B part is an actual MOS, but the "2T" bit is questionable.
I dont know an exact number, but it's the 2nd largest MOS in the army after infantry.