Take a good, hard look at job titles such as “yeoman” and “corpsman.” You won’t see them much longer, as least in current news or reports that come out of the U.S. Navy.

The Navy is dropping the word “man” from its job titles and changing up many other employment titles to be more in line with the other service branches — it will also appear more gender-neutral in its job descriptions, the Navy Times reported. The changes result from a review of the job titles of enlisted sailors, a review “sparked by the decision to open all job specialties to women,” as a piece in the Washington Examiner noted.

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The Navy will now give sailors “occupational specialty codes” — not rating titles. In practical terms, an E-5 sailor will no longer be called “corpsman second class.” He or she will be known instead as “second class petty officer.”

“In aligning the descriptions of the work our sailors do with their counterparts in the civilian world, we more closely reflect the nation we protect while also making it easier for our sailors to obtain the credentials they’ll need to be successful in the private sector,” Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said in a statement.

Boatswain’s mate, gunner’s mate, yeoman and master-at-arms — these terms have all been used by the U.S. Navy since the late 1700s, the Examiner noted.

Back in June, the Marine Corps announced it would get rid of the word “man” in 19 of its job titles. The Navy, however, needed more time to study and review its current job titles and suggest replacement titles, in order to provide sailors with more flexibility and opportunities when transitioning out of the Navy, according to a spokesman for Mabus. He denied “a direct line” between the effort for gender-neutrality and the change announced Thursday.

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The change strips “man” from many job titles, though sailors who are at the E-3 rank and below will still be called seamen.