An ancient Greek foot soldier was called a hoplite.
Ma, Mam or oul' wan
a name for a mongol empire foot soldier is a infantry
Its slang for the doughnut long john. this is because shaun is the Irish name for john.
definition : louser n (Irish) slang a mean nasty person
A World War 2 foot soldier is commonly referred to as an infantryman or GI (short for "Government Issue").
The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".The Latin name for a soldier is "miles" -- a generic term. As Latin is a language that is specific about things, a foot soldier would be a "miles gregarius" or a "miles pedes", a cavlary soldier was a "miles eques" and a marine was a "miles classicus".
Yes, "Paddy" is a common slang term for an Irishman.
Irish Gaelic Séamus (shamus).
Declan is a fine name! It's a very popular, Irish name, for a boy, originated in Ireland, where it was called Declaney and it meant young soldier.
There were 80 men in a Roman century. Many people mistake the word "century" as denoting 100, but the army's use of the term century was not based on the Latin word centum, meaning one hundred, but on the voting assemblies which were divided into centuries. In the old days, each century was responsible for a fixed number of fighting men. The army, being the army, kept the term "century" for its basic unit, and the term "centurion" for its commander, even though the number was 80.
A group of natives killed him (poison arrow in foot + spear through hear), in the Battle of Mactan in the Phillippines.