Military greeting or salute is a formal military gesture of respect. They do it whenever and whenever they meet a high official or to any military officer to show their respect. They do it also if they are going to speak to the military officer or to give a report.
Its just military practice. Most if not all military have a salute.
The modern western military salute evolved from the practice of raising ones hat. The salute is used as a symbolic gesture.
21 gun salute................
The salute is made with the right hand over the heart, the standard civil, not military, flag salute.
salute
21
Not unless you are military.
A salute is a formal gesture of admiration or loyalty. You see this a lot in military organizations. Here are some sentences.I salute you for your excellent work.The private must salute the Sergeant whenever they meet.At the funeral, Dad's military unit gave him a 21-gun salute out of respect.
SALUTE IS THE HIGHEST FORM OF MILITARY COURTESY AMONG MEN AND WOMEN IN THE MILITARY. IF YOU ARE A CIVILIAN WHO WALKS TOGETHER WITH A MILITARY OFFICER, AUTOMATICALLY, THE SUBORDINATES OF THAT MILITARY OFFICER YOU ARE WALKING WITH WILL RENDER A SALUTE AT LEAST 6FT IN DISTANCE AND SHALL BE ANSWERED BY THE OFFICER BEING SALUTED.
The English word is "salute" (military courtesy). The spelling "salut" is a French greeting, or a Catalan phrase used as a toast.
Of course. The salute is a ritual that is meant to show respect. For example, when a president exits Air Force One, the military guard at the foot of the plane's stairs salutes the president (whether that president served in the military or not); the president then returns the salute.
the pilots