Royal marines join full time and do 32 weeks training
Royal marines reserve are like the territorial army, you still have a job (teacher, doctor) but you do one weekend a month training for 18 months and support the full time marines
There's no difference their both under the Department of the Navy.
The Marine Corps Reserves do the EXACT same thing as active duty Marines except they are reserves. Instead of going to work EVERYDAY, they go to work once a month. They are expected to do the exact same PFT as active and have the exact same expectations and requirments as active duty Marines. The only real difference is the name. Active and reserve. Hope this helps
the marines are the best snipers hand down
Yes, He served in the Marine Corps Reserves from 1981-1986.
the difference is that one is turbocharged and one isnt,but both are marine engines. Keep in mind,there is a difference between marine and non-marine engines.
Marines are an active duty component while the Guard is part time. Also the uniforms are different.
marine insurance
a marine biologist is just a biologist that works in the water and has nothing to do with being in the marines. so yes you can be a marine biologist without being in the marines.
For anything
difference of motor and marine insurance
The recognized "Birthday" of the U.S. Marine Corps is 10 November, 1775.
The first was Captain Samuel Nicholas who was commissioned to create the Marine Corps 5 days before the legislation to create the Continental Marines was passed by the Congress. At least by tradition, the Tun Tavern Proprietor Robert Mullen was his Marine Recruiter and the first Marine to be made a Sergeant. The Royal Marines with Reserves totals only about 8,300 men and dates from 1664. The Netherlands Marine Corps dates from 1665. The Russian Naval Infantry has existed since 1705. That handles the US Marine Corps, but there have been marines in earlier times and surely the Phoenicians had them hundreds of years earlier for both internal and external security.