Crossword clues for sergeants
Wiktionary
n. (plural of sergeant English)
Usage examples of "sergeants".
Along with distributing promotion warrants, Van Winkle would pin these medals on the new lance corporals, corporals, sergeants, and staff sergeants.
The gunners were working in shirtsleeves, swabbing, ramming, then ducking aside as the guns pitched back again Only the gun commanders most of them sergeants, seemed to look at the enemy, and then only when they were checking the alignment of the cannon.
Adjutant, in a voice so strong and confident that all the elder officers and the sergeants well understood that this failure was preconcerted, while all the younger gentlemen and the privates felt new encouragement to proceed on account of the evident impartiality with which the laws of the sports were administered.
He acknowledged other sergeants with a nod, lazily saluted the few officers there were around here, and ignored everybody else.
Van Winkle and the two sergeants major were on their feet and crowding in to offer congratulations Ramadan hovered behind them, trying to find space to squeeze in to add his own.
There was himself, three Lieutenants, four sergeants, and the rest were all storekeepers or clerks.
Yet the Battalion was recruiting, and that meant its recruiting sergeants were on the roads of Britain, and those sergeants, Sharpe knew, would take their men back to wherever the Battalion was concealed.
They would be sergeants, he said, before the snow fell, and as likely as not, they would all be officers within the year.
He made the Sergeants and officers patrol the tent lines, listening for voices, and it was rumoured that Girdwood himself had been seen, on hands and knees, threading his body between the tent guy ropes to put an ear close to the canvas.
He argued stubbornly, wept when he was punished, and even at night, in the stillness of the tent lines, when the soft tread of the patrolling sergeants and officers listening for mutiny could be heard outside, Marriott cried.
The squad lined up in front of the tent and listened to the shouts of the sergeants and corporals.
All of the officers and four of the sergeants were on horseback and had cavalry carbines sheathed in their saddle holsters.
The other sergeants carried muskets, but their job this night was merely to beat the prey towards the hunters.
The officers and sergeants knew, too, that it was tactful to leave the killing stroke to the Colonel who was proud of his sabre-work.
He guessed what the outcome would be, for he had seen before, and with some shame, how the boredom and brutality of Foulness increasingly encouraged its officers and sergeants to the foulest licence that even encompassed murder.