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Some people said it's Sir/Ma'am but some also say that it's Mr and Ms/Mrs
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 188
Never saw many at all in the Navy but I did have a great division officer who was one. We would address him as Sir or Mr. as you wold a Navy Jr. officer.
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I Found That Mr . With The Last Name Also Worked When Address Warrants On The Job
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I'm prior-Air Force, with a limited interaction with Warrant Officers from 30+ years ago, namely 1987-1994, and then almost a decade ago for another year (2009-2010), but in all my time addressing CWOs, the few times I called one 'Sir', they each politely corrected me and instructed me to call them 'Mister'. The CWOs and I shared a professional relationship: they called in their VFR flight plans to me, and I called Tower to ensure their engine starts/taxi requests were expedited as much as our IFR traffic. The last CW3 that I had the pleasure and honor to assist (in 2010), reached out to me for guidance on airport markings; specifically on the airfield and flightline in regards to FAA regulations. I responded with my usual prompt professionalism, and he was another satisfied customer with whom I had established a good rapport, and mutually-respectful professional relationship. GOD bless Mister Dave Carter, R.I.P. #EXTORTION 17
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Mr, Sir or chief. My son just made chief in the CG. He is a C-130 Flight Engineer/Mechanic and has his eye on Warrant.
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I'm old school and call them, "Chief" or Mister. When I got to my unit assignment in Viet Nam, I had five warrant officers as roommates and I was a First Lieutenant. We called each other by our first names. :-)
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