A true veteran is someone that has serve and protected our country. A true veteran will lay (his or her) life on the line for someone but also risking (his or her) life. A true veteran is the reason why our country is free and why we are called The United States Of America.
State laws do not govern SSD or Veteran Disability benefits. Such benefits are protected under federal exemption laws and are not subject to attachment for creditor debt only.
Novice is an antonym for veteran
Yes, but only with the veteran's written authorization. DD214s and other records within federal records repositories and agencies are protected by the Privacy Act. They can be access by the veteran, and the veteran's representative authorized by the veteran in writing. Many employers will request the job candidates to provide permission to review their "undeleted" or "long form" DD214. This permits verification of the document that the candidate presents in his job application. There's a good section on DD214s and Employers at http://dd214.us.
Military nurse in war,YES...a military veteran. Civilian nurse in war, YES...a VETERAN of her occupation but not a MILITARY Veteran. Another words, the word "Veteran" is not strictly a military term. A person can be a veteran doctor, veteran lawyer, veteran school teacher, etc. Veteran means someone that has been doing that job/occupation for a long time.
i think its veteran day
No, you do not capitalize "veteran" in "USMC veteran." In general, the word "veteran" is not capitalized unless it is part of a proper noun or at the beginning of a sentence.
Chapter 13 (and all) bankruptcy is Federal Filing. And, no, usually Vets benefits are protected under bankruptcy. See an attorney familiar with these matters.
the veteran was crying because he missed his family
If she isn't a veteran, no. Only a vet can use the veteran benefits.
A American veteran that has seved in a war for aMerica
The veteran laughed at the new recruits.