If you go on base to buy groceries, you go to the Commissary. All military commisaries are owned and managed by DECA. There is also the Base Exchange or BX (Air Force), Navy Exchange or NEX (Naval Stations), and Post Exchange or PX (Army Bases). Their civilian counterpart would be Wal-Mart, K-Mart, or Target.
They were called Jarls
No, its just the Cubans keep coming to Florida
Warlords.
Almost every U.S. military base has a used car lot, or resale lot, where members of the military community park their vehicles to sell ... cars, trucks, motorcycles, boats, campers, trailers ... any licensed vehicle. The resale lot is popularly called the "Lemon Lot" ... an unofficial, jestful term of endearment. But these vehicles are not lemons. The purpose of the Lemon Lot is to help the military buy or sell their vehicles within the military community with no hassles, scams, or fraud. And quickly ... often because of short-notice deployments or orders to move. The Lemon Lot at overseas bases has an even higher demand for trust worthy, quick sells with no hassles because of the unknowns about the market off base. Taken together--in the U.S. or overseas--the Lemon Lot has been making a popular name for itself at our worldwide U.S. military bases and is an important part of the military family's life. The lemon lot is online at LemonLot.com.
The first J.C. Penney store was in Wyoming, but then it was called the Golden Rule store, they actually didn't name it J.C. Penney until 1913.
Yes. Such establishments are typically called Military Surplus stores.
The military base, Fort Gnome Military Base I think its called. :):)
The Army does not supply them to you, but they can be purchased at the Post Exchange (PX) store(s) located on base.
The military base in Valdosta, GA is called Moody Air Force Base.
Commissary.
Ship's Store is the normal name for it. That's what is on the placard for the space.
The military base is called Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune. There has been a pronunciation error in the military ranks sounding it out as Luh-JUNE, however the family that the base was named after pronunciates it as Luh-JERN.
The name of the US army military base in Swinefort Germany is called the Army Garrison Schweinfurt.
It's called an NEX for Navy Exchange.
The Air Force calls their military stores on base, the BX (Base Exchange), the Army calls theirs the PX (Post Exchange). Smaller stores on large Firebases (in Vietnam), or large Combat Bases for the Army were sometimes referred to as "canteens." For the US Army, Air Force, and Navy, food stores were often called "commissarys." Stores that sold US Military uniforms on army posts were called "Clothing Sales."
A military Fort will commonly be called a Base or Post by most military personal. How ever if you are doing training at that base you will commonly hear it refered to as a Camp
Killen, TXhttp://www.brandweek.com/bw/content_display/news-and-features/direct/e3i418dddc577c320a49a01999b3a3a005a