>>>>>>I don't believe you. I don't know about the USAF, or whatever country you served, but I've never heard of regiments inside an AF, certainly not the RAF; they have squadrons. There is "The RAF Regiment" but they're like RAF soldiers whose job it is to secure and defend air bases.
>>>>>
>>>>>I think the Army Air Corps (from whence came the USAF) took a lot of structure from the RAF, hence Squadrons, Flights, etc.
>>>>
>>>>I think whence came the US
AAF, thence the USAF, nicht wahr?
>>>
>>>ah-yup
>>
>>But they didn't take the ranks: Flt Lt, Wing Commander, Squadron leader, Air Commodore
>
>They did take several of the titles, though it makes sense to use the same title for the same job, the rank structure came from the Army.
Like which? I haven't heard any, and you said they took the rank structure from the army (makes sense as it was the USAAF).
In GB it's only the army that has this rank structure. Your police forces have the same too. Here it's Constable, Sergeant, Inspector (cf LT), Chief Inspector (cf Capt), Superintendent (cf Major), Chief Superintendent (cf Colonel), Chief Constable or (in the London Met Police) Commissioner (cf General)
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.