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Very
early in the morning, pronounced oh, dark thirty. [Editor's Note: A lot
of people have complained that a Marine would not call the numeral zero
an "oh". That is possibly correct but it was pronounced in that
unorthodox way when it was first used in the 1960s, possibly to add
emphasis to the phrase.] |
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030SHIT
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Pronounced
"Oh three, Oh shit." Military Occupational Specialty of a junior
infantry officer. |
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(Vietnam)
The MOS for an unlucky cocksucker. |
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1900
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Homosexual.
From the paragraph in the Separations Manual in the 1970s and 1980s
that discusses homosexuals. |
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1-MC
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The
communication system aboard ship which allows orders and information to
be passed immediately to all members of the crew. Usually a series of
speakers throughout the entire ship. |
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1st
Civ. Div. |
1st
Civilian Division. Civilian life. Before or after service in the Marine
Corps. See COMCIVLANT. |
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Located
at Camp Pendleton, CA it is a unit of the I Marine Expeditionary Force. |
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24/7
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24
hours a day, seven days a week. Essentially always. Originally a
reference to the perpetual card games on the fantail of a troop ship. |
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25-MC
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The
communication system aboard ship which allows orders and information to
be passed immediately to specific compartments and preselected crew
members. |
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Located
at Camp LeJeune, NC it is a unit of the II Marine |
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Located
on the island of Okinawa, Japan it is a unit |
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.45
caliber weapon, usually an M1911A1.
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4merMarine.com
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The
web site that hosts this dictionary and the compiled quotes.
It is in reality a misnomer because, "Once a Marine, Always a Marine."
In order to be a former Marine, one must have been first a Marine and
then be either dead or incarcerated--the editor qualifies only on the
first point. Unfortunately all of that was just too complicated to put
into a domain name. This is a private project and actively seeks your
assistance in the form of corrections and additions (I am in particular
need of current words and phrases). I would also not turn down
financial help in the cost of the domain and the server--as a retired,
disabled GI who is still paying the Retired Military Disability TAX,
money is always tight. This is
also permission to link to this dictionary or to use this dictionary in
any way that is legal. It is here to enjoy at no charge.
You can also access this dictionary through OldCorps.org. |
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4-striper
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A
Navy or Coast Guard captain. The informal reference alludes to the four
wide stripes worn on the cuffs of the blue uniform or the shoulder boards of captains. |
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5th
Marine Division |
The
National Guard. Jokingly given the name due to the |
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72
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A
72-hour absence from duty. Granted by commanding officers and not
charged as leave. |
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Originally
individual equipment owned by a unit and issued to a Marine while
assigned to that unit. In boot camp that included a bucket, cleaning
equipment, a poncho and a shelter half. The name is derived from the
first three digits in the original Marine Corps Supply Classification
for "Individual Equipment" (WWII and Korea). When the Federal Stock
Number (FSN) system was created "Individual Equipment" fell into the
84XX group. Present use refers to the Load Bearing Vest, cartridge belt
and the equipment attached to the belt as well as other field
equipment. This history is often confused with the 734 Book that supply
types used for the issue or turn-in of equipment, most
warehousemen carried a 734 Book in their back pocket at all times. |
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86
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To
throw away or get rid of something. From the number of the form
originally used to remove an item from a stock record. |
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8th
and Eye |
Location
of the Commandant's house, Marine Barracks, Washington, the Marine
Corps Band and Drum and Bugle Corps as well as MCI. It is the
ceremonial home of the Corps. It was the only public building not set
afire when the British overran Washington, DC in the War of 1812, some
say because of their stoic defense at Bladensburg Pike. From its
address at 8th and I Streets SE, Washington, DC. |
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900
inch Range |
A
rifle range of approximately 100 inches used to zero weapons prior to
qualification. |
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90-Day
Wonder |
Unflattering
term for an OCS graduate. Refers to the early practice of training
commissioned officers in three months rather than the four years in the
Naval Academy or the 4 year part-time training in ROTC. Also, 90-day
blunder. |
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96
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A
96-hour absence from duty. Granted by commanding officers for
outstanding duty, unit successes or special holidays. Not charged as
leave. |
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(Vietnam)
The northernmost of four corps areas in South Vietnam. I Corps was the
province of the U. S. Marines while II, III and IV Corps were U. S.
Army areas. Pronounced eye-corps. |
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A
Marine
Air Ground Task Force
(MAGTF) of the primarily composed of the 1st
Marine Division,
3rd
Marine Aircraft Wing,
and 1st
Marine Logistics Group.
Among Marines, it is common to pronounce I MEF as "eye mef", "first
mef", or "one mef". The 1st Marine Expeditionary Force is commanded by
a Lieutenant
General.
(I stole this from Wikipedia
so I left the links hot) |
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A
Marine
Air-Ground Task Force
consisting of ground, air and logistics forces capable of projecting
offensive combat power ashore while sustaining itself in combat without
external assistance for a period of 60 days. The II Marine
Expeditionary Force is commanded by a Lieutenant
General,
who serves as Commander, US Marine Corps Forces, Atlantic, providing
Marine fighting formations and units to European
Command,
Central
Command
and Southern
Command.
Consists mainly of the 2nd Marine Division, 2nd Marine
Aircraft Wing and the 2nd Marine Logistics Group. (Also stolen from Wikopedia) |
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A
Marine
Air-Ground Task Force
that is forward-deployed and able to deploy rapidly and conduct
operations across the spectrum from humanitarian
assistance
and disaster relief to amphibious
assault
and high intensity combat. III MEF maintains a forward presence in
Japan and Asia to support the U.S. – Japan Treaty of Mutual
Cooperation and Security and other alliance relationships of the United
States. III MEF also conducts combined operations and training
throughout the region in support of the National Security Strategy for
Theater Security Cooperation. Its major units are the 3rd Marine
Division, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, 3rd Marine Logistics Group and the
31st Marine Expeditionary Unit. (Thanks again to Wikopedia) |
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Semper Fi