Category:Noncommissioned officers - Factbites
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Topic: Category:Noncommissioned officers


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 Non-commissioned officer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Warrant officers are often included in the SNCO category, but actually form a separate class of their own.
A non-commissioned officer (sometimes noncommissioned officer), also known as an NCO or noncom, is a non-commissioned member of an armed force who has been given authority by a commissioned officer.
SNCOs and WOs have their own messes, which are similar to officers' messes (and are usually known as Sergeants' Messes), whereas JNCOs live and eat with the unranked personnel.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Noncommissioned_Officer   (499 words)

  
 Non-commissioned officer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Warrant officers are often included in the SNCO category, but actually form a separate class of their own.
A non-commissioned officer (sometimes noncommissioned officer), also known as an NCO or noncom, is a non-commissioned member of an armed force who has been given authority by a commissioned officer.
The Royal Navy does not refer to its petty officers and warrant officers as NCOs, but calls them Senior Ratings (or Senior Rates).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Non-commissioned_officer   (499 words)

  
 Non-commissioned officer - free-definition
Warrant officers are often included in the SNCO category, but actually form a separate class of their own.
A non-commissioned officer (sometimes noncommissioned officer), or NCO, is an enlisted member of an armed force who has been delegated leadership or command authority by a commissioned officer.
SNCOs and WOs have their own messes, which are similar to officers' messes (and are usually known as Sergeants' Messes), whereas JNCOs live and eat with the unranked personnel.
www.free-definition.com /NCO.html   (499 words)

  
 RAND Advanced Publication Search View Abstract
The study covers managing the ethnic factor in recruitment, general stationing guidelines and practices, the ethnic composition of conscripts, noncommissioned officers and the officer corps, the education and training of non-Russian servicemen, language problems, the relationship between religion and nationality, and inter-ethnic relations.
Data from each research category indicate that Soviet military planners have many ethnic-related problems in the military that impede integration and may affect operational effectiveness and choice.
Abstract: A preliminary effort to assess the effect of the ethnic factor on the Soviet armed forces from in-depth interviews with former Soviet servicemen.
www.rand.org /cgi-bin/Abstracts/e-getabbydoc.pl?N-1486/1   (499 words)

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