Sergeant E. Bradley is a relatively common name and could refer to various individuals, particularly in military contexts. Without specific details or context, it's difficult to pinpoint a particular person. If you are referring to a specific event or service, please provide more information for a more accurate response.
He was a E-8 First Sergeant
my brothers called bradley so no it isn't cool (take that bradley)
Bradley Stryker's birth name is Bradley Robert Stryker.
Shae Bradley's birth name is Kristina Shae Bradley.
Bradley Nowell's birth name is Bradley James Nowell.
Sergeant Preston of the Yukon - 1955 Battle at Bradley's 3-13 was released on: USA: 26 December 1957
C. E. Bradley has written: 'Poems'
Sergeant (E-5); Buck Sergeant (nick name).
John E. Bradley was born on 1971-05-10.
E-5 is Sergeant and E-7 is Gunnery (USMC) Staff is E-6. look for e-6 equivalent in whatever branch you need.
Staff Sergeant/SSG
I assume you are talking about E-8 and E-9 ranks. At E-8 you become either a First Sergeant or a Master Sergeant. If you take the First Sergeant route the next rank becomes Sergeant Major. If you take the Master Sergeant route the next rank becomes Master Gunnery Sergeant.
Stanley E. Bradley has written: 'The pathologic physiology of uremia in chronic Bright's Disease'
Master sergeant
Mary E. Bradley Lane has written: 'Mizora' -- subject(s): Fiction, Utopias, Women
E. G Sergeant has written: 'Stamp duties 1971 incorporating a third (cumulative) supplement and noter-up to Sergeant on stamp duties' 'Stamp duties'
Verbal conversations are nearly always General, Colonel, or Lieutenant. Written communications almost always should be Major General, Lieutenant Colonel or 1st Lieutenant.AnswerIn the British Armed Forces, you never address an officer by rank alone. James Bond would never be addressed as "Commander", but as "Commander Bond". Subordinates would never address him by rank; they would simply call him "Sir", never "Commander".