Depends which unit you are referring to.
Poetic foot is the basic unit of measuring rhythm in poetry.
The unit of electrical charge is the coulomb, a special name given to an ampere second.
It's a 30 dollar part. The unit should be located near the filter. Unplug/Unscrew the old one and insert new and plug in.
A pound is a unit of mass. A quart is a unit of capacity. Without some unit of density to compare, the two units are incompatible.
== ==
wearing the green beret
wearing the green beret
wearing the green beret
wearing the green beret
wearing the green beret
wearing green beret
In the US Military, prior to general issue (everyone wearing it), the beret symbolized a special unit.
The British SAS beret in World War 2 was maroon in color. The maroon beret was chosen to distinguish the SAS from other military units and became a symbol of their elite status. The tradition of wearing the maroon beret continues to this day in the Special Air Service.
They could be assigned to Special Forces, but only as support personnel, and not as an actual operator. Non SF-qualified personnel in Special Forces Groups can be identified by the absence of the Special Forces tab above their unit patch, and their wear of the maroon beret, rather than the green beret.
The US Army is filled with traditions. One definition of tradition is "a customary pattern of thought, action, or behavior held by an identifiable group of people." A well-known tradition is the action of a lower-ranking person saluting a higher-ranking military officer. Another common tradition is the wearing of distinctive unit insignia, such as crests and patches.
The Red Beret, also known as The Red Devils, is an elite airborne forces unit of the British Army. It was formed on 6 June 1940 during World War II, in response to the need for a highly trained parachute force to carry out special operations. Since then, the unit has been involved in various conflicts and operations around the world.
The military beret for almost every country that used them wear them so that they flop over to the right side. So the side on the Left is the only place to attach a badge or insignia. For the US, the left insignia has traditionally been worn on the LEFT side. I guess this was carried over to the beret. One of the first berets worn by the US Army was the berets unofficially adopted by the 77th Special Operations Group, or aka the "Green Berets". They wore them when President Kennedy inspected the base and he commented that the unit looked sharp in their green berets. So it became official. From what I was told when in the military, it is located on the beret over the left eye because most marksmen sight their weapons with their right eyes, thereby decreasing the possibility that the beret would obscure their vision.