What is the meaning of SENI. Phrases containing SENI
See meanings and uses of SENI!Slangs & AI meanings
At sea, the quartermaster is the Master Seaman, Leading Seaman or Able Seaman who is in charge of the helmsman. In harbour, the quartermaster is the senior member of the gangway staff and is responsible for supervising the bosn's mate and the security of the brow.
Thumbing your nose at a senior shipmate behind their back. It is reminiscent of a person taking a sight with a sextant, but it is not meant for navigation.
Senior Canadian Officer Present Afloat.
Peyote
Railroad employee who is glad when someone above him dies, gets killed, is fired, or resigns, so he can move up the seniority list to a better job
Lots of Seniority
A complete walk around the ship, checking on all spaces. The Officer of the Watch along with the senior non-commissioned officer would do rounds every evening.
The senior hand of a mess, responsible for the cleanliness and good order of the mess.
Female senior citizens who sell OxyContin
Quite a bit of seniority
The Lieutenant-Commander is naval equivalent to Major in the Army and Air Force. The rank insignia is two standard stripes with a narrow stripe. In 1875, Lieutenants of eight years' seniority were "frocked", or given the 'half-stripe' of commander, and in 1914 the rank of Lieutenant-Commander was officially established.
The gold braid found on the cap brim of a senior officer.
A ceremony where the arrival of a senior officer is signified by the playing of a boatswain's call.
Engineer or conductor, paid on mileage basis, who uses his seniority to the limit in getting good runs, which younger men resent
peyote
A special group of Officers and Senior NCOs who have the role in training and readiness of ships throughout the fleet. Often feared, they're usual response is, "Were only here to help you."
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a.
More advanced than another in age; prior in age; elder; hence, more advanced in dignity, rank, or office; superior; as, senior member; senior counsel.
n.
A custom, formerly practiced by the scholars at Eton school, England, of going every third year, on Whittuesday, to a hillock near the Bath road, and exacting money from all passers-by, to support at the university the senior scholar of the school.
a.
Belonging to the final year of the regular course in American colleges, or in professional schools.
n.
Seniority.
n.
One of those who stand in the second rank of honors, immediately after the wranglers, in the University of Cambridge, England. They are divided into senior and junior optimes.
n.
Hence: One of a lower or later standing; specifically, in American colleges, one in the third year of his course, one in the fourth or final year being designated a senior; in some seminaries, one in the first year, in others, one in the second year, of a three years' course.
a.
Of or pertaining to old age; proceeding from, or characteristic of, old age; affected with the infirmities of old age; as, senile weakness.
n.
The quality or state of being senior.
n.
A detachment of vessels employed on any particular service or station, under the command of the senior officer; as, the North Atlantic Squadron.
n.
One in the fourth or final year of his collegiate course at an American college; -- originally called senior sophister; also, one in the last year of the course at a professional schools or at a seminary.
n.
The quality or state of being senile; old age.
a.
The state of being the firstborn of the same parents; seniority by birth among children of the same family.
n.
A person who is older than another; one more advanced in life.
n.
An aged person; an older.
n.
One of those who stand in the first rank of honors in the University of Cambridge, England. They are called, according to their rank, senior wrangler, second wrangler, third wrangler, etc. Cf. Optime.
n.
A captain of a war vessel whose name appeared, or was "posted," in the seniority list of the British navy, as distinguished from a commander whose name was not so posted. The term was also used in the United States navy; but no such commission as post-captain was ever recognized in either service, and the term has fallen into disuse.
n.
Tendency to fall; the feebleness of old age; senility.
v. i.
To exercise authority; to rule; to lord it.
n.
In the University of Oxford, an examiner for moderations; at Cambridge, the superintendant of examinations for degrees; at Dublin, either the first (senior) or second (junior) in rank in an examination for the degree of Bachelor of Arts.
n.
One older in office, or whose entrance upon office was anterior to that of another; one prior in grade.
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