Hair refers to the bar on the epaulettes, one sea represents one bar, and two hairs represent two bars; And so on.
The number behind the hair represents the stars. A dime is a long strip with two stars, representing a lieutenant.
Captain: Ten cents,
Captain: 12 cents,
Captain: 13 cents.
Major: 2 1 cent,
Lieutenant colonel: 22 cents,
C: Twenty-three cents,
Senior colonel: twenty-four cents.
Question 2: What is the rank of Armed Police? This is the rank of the army. The epaulettes of officers of the Armed Police Force are dark olive green, and those of soldiers are red. The rank of the armed police is consistent with that of the army. The bar with two stars is the main rank of lieutenant and commander-in-chief, and the auxiliary rank of commander-in-chief and deputy commander-in-chief
Question 3: What is the ranking of 22 cents? Twenty-two-fingered Lieutenant Colonel (so called twenty-two because its epaulettes are two poles and two stars).
Question 4: What do you usually mean by Chinese rank, such as 12, 22? Can you tell me all the ranks now, QAQ? Thank you! Captain: 1 1 cent, captain: 12 cent, captain: 13 cent.
Major: 2 1 cent, Lieutenant Colonel: 22 cents, Colonel: 23 cents, and Senior Colonel: 24 cents.
Now only junior officers and school officials have this statement.
Question 5: What are the officers with two ranks 12? Two crutches: a first-class soldier can be a monitor.
12: captain level, deputy company level cadre.
Question 6: The correspondence table of rank and epaulettes (that is, what is a dime and a dime ..... one column and one star are arranged in a row.
One, two stars, secondary connection, positive connection
One pole, three stars, even vice battalion, two poles, one star, vice battalion, vice regiment.
Bipolar, two stars, battalion, vice regiment, regiment.
Deputy division of parallel bars Samsung.
Two parallel bars, four-star deputy division, main division and deputy army.
Major general, deputy army, regular army
Question 7: What is the rank often mentioned? Ten cents and twelve cents are nicknames for rank among ordinary people. Ten cents for a second lieutenant, one bar for one star, ten cents for a lieutenant, and two stars for one bar. And so on.
Question 8: What are the ranks of 120 and 220, which are often mentioned in the army? The so-called "12 cents" is a bar with two stars, and the rank of lieutenant corresponds to the rank of platoon leader and deputy company commander.
Floating refers to "22 cents", that is, two stars at two poles, the rank of lieutenant colonel, corresponding to the post of deputy regiment.
Question 9: How old is this officer? The captain of the armed police is usually a platoon leader or company commander.
Question 10: What is the rank of the instructor of the Armed Police Squadron and how many stars are there? The instructor is a regular employee (not the deputy employee mentioned upstairs), usually the captain, with three stars in a row.