A soldier that wears two stripes is a 'sergeant'.
The stripes on a soldier's sleeve, shows their rank: one stripe is Lance Corporal, two stripes is Corporal, three stripes is Sergeant, and so on.
it is a a corporal
Two stripes in the Australian army signifies a Corporal or a Bombardier.
It is a WW II army rank and consisted of two stripes with a T under the two stripes. It was equivalent to corporal.
T5 was a rank in the US Army and Army Air Force in WW II is stood for Tech 5, it was equal to a corporal in pay but lacked the command of a corporal. The rank on the uniform was a corporal stripes with a "T" under them. He was the most junior of the NCO ratings.
Generally they have three stripes, though in some forces this may vary or be a compound rank and have more, or less with additional markings.
Corporal means to be relating to, or effecting the body. An example sentence would be: She has many corporal concerns.
4 stripes
13 stripes
18 stripes.
There are 13 stripes total, 7 red stripes and 6 white stripes.