Lieutenant in a sentence as a noun

His gripe was the boot lieutenant dipshit who sees it on TV, gets the DVD, and decides that he's going to "revolutionize" the unit's PT program.

It's like a battlefield lieutenant, scared of being sent to the front line and getting shot, proclaiming 'soldiers should learn to simply delegate combat duty.

The CEO and sys admin who was his trusted lieutenant immediately seized upon this and were barking out orders that we should run whatever was in production.

Sometimes like a young lieutenant fresh out of OCS they don't know how to trust their Sargents to get things done, they force a process or a course of action on them which is recreating a wheel.

Moreover, we now have distributed version control and can utilize lieutenant workflows, so we can dispatch with this silly "commit bit" notion that means bad code sneaks in past domain experts with ease.

This article ignores a lot of peer-reviewed literature from planning, public health / injury prevention, and civil engineering in favor of some folksy wisdom of a lieutenant cop.

But a police lieutenant can retire in his 50s and take home $230,000 in one-time payouts on his last day, before settling in with a guaranteed $128,000-a-year pension.> In 2009, patrol lieutenant Richard Taack retired at the age of 59, after 37 years of service.

Lieutenant definitions

noun

a commissioned military officer

noun

an officer in a police force

noun

an assistant with power to act when his superior is absent

See also: deputy

noun

an officer holding a commissioned rank in the United States Navy or the United States Coast Guard; below lieutenant commander and above lieutenant junior grade