Harry Truman retired after his presidency in Independence, Missouri. Harry & his wife, Elizabeth (Bess), lived very quiet, private lives.
The only general that comes to mind was retired by President Truman, not FDR. Hmmm.
Retire is not an abbreviation, unless you are using it in a specific way
~8 years. Usually, a service dog will graduate at age 2 and retire at around age 10.
Yes, based on rank and years of service.
It is a pension given to police personnel when they retire form the police service.
The past tense of "retire" without adding "-ed" is "retired."
There is no set age at which women can retire from the US Armed Forces. Both men and women can retire after 20 years of active service.
Ment. The word without prefixes and suffixes is "retire."
He retired from the presidency in March of 1829. He never did retire from public service; he died at age 80 while serving in Congress.
Enlisting was changed to 42. I do not believe there is a mandatory retirement age. Admiral Rickover was forced to retire in his 80's after 63 years of service on 31 January 1982. Of course it is more at the discretion of the individual service and the ability of the soldier or sailor to do his assigned tasks, his physical ability.
Finish your service time, Retire, Get wounded or ill and you can sometimes buy your way out