Possibly J. Lawton "Lightening Joe" Collins, one of the very best corps commanders in the US Army in WWII. Collins went on to be commanding general of the US Army, as Chief of Staff, in the 1950s.
They would close up and use their shields.
Brass is an alloy, Kelvin is a temperature scale. The temperature of the brass would depend on its surroundings
To mix carbon with brass, the brass must be in molten form to form an alloy.
In actual cases of retirement, they would be prone to addressing themselves by their rank. A retired Master Sergeant, for example, would be MSG (Ret.).
There was a trench knife issued to US Army troops that was a knife that had a "Brass Knuckles" handle. Brass Knuckles is a brass "ring" that you slip over your hand, each finger going into a loop. This is used for hand-to-hand fighting. The knife had this same construction as part of the handle/grip. I'm not sure if this was an official Army issue. The Army preferred the soldier carry a bayonet that would fit onto the rifle. This brass knuckle trench knife couldnot do this.
I'd get a magnet and remove the brass with that.
No, it would go in the "String Family", not the "Brass Family".
If brass instruments were straightened out, their length would be anywhere from 8 to 25 feet.
The plural of Collins is Collinses. if the subjectal of the word was indescriminated you could, so yes
No
One would be the Sousaphone.
Brass bushings inside the electric starter motor.