Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q17146893> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 triples per page.
- Q17146893 subject Q6416401.
- Q17146893 subject Q6829287.
- Q17146893 abstract "Sub-Officer, or the equivalent in other languages, is a term used in many armed forces used to indicate ranks below commissioned officers. Sub-officer is equivalent to the term warrant officer in the British Commonwealth and the United States. Historically armed forces using the term sub-officer have used it to refer to more senior non-commissioned ranks, typically from sergeant upwards, but the term often covers all ranks that other forces designate non-commissioned. In navies the term is comparable to petty officer.There is a specific rank of "sub-officer" in some armed forces, in the UK Fire and Rescue Services, and in the Irish Fire Services.".
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q157696.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q158950.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q16965787.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q17378201.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q189290.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q19904165.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q204310.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q2317752.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q3100431.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q322749.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q41685.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q5184784.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q616200.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q628021.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q6313530.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q6416401.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q6781898.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q6829287.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q7604324.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q772547.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q7785.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q837643.
- Q17146893 wikiPageWikiLink Q897825.
- Q17146893 comment "Sub-Officer, or the equivalent in other languages, is a term used in many armed forces used to indicate ranks below commissioned officers. Sub-officer is equivalent to the term warrant officer in the British Commonwealth and the United States. Historically armed forces using the term sub-officer have used it to refer to more senior non-commissioned ranks, typically from sergeant upwards, but the term often covers all ranks that other forces designate non-commissioned.".
- Q17146893 label "Sub-Officer".