Nothing, essentially. Both are used interchangeably to refer to the exact same thing.
The difference between a shogun and a samurai is like the difference between a king and a knight.
A samurai is comparable to a medieval knight not just anyone can be one they have to be a descendant from another samurai and they have to train for years. A regular soldier is just anyone who was inlisted or joined the military.
In the mid-evil time like the Saxons and Germanic tribes, the Japanese developed an advanced feudal system. On the Bushi fighting scale the Samurai was the warrior before you became a Samurai your title would be Ninja the lowest rank on the Bushi fighting scale. Samurai usually always served under a shogon who was their master, and would send Samurai off to fight other tribes and factions in mid-evil Japan. there were also Daimyos who would hire Samurai for protection of their estates and families. then there were also Ronin who were "Masterless Samurai" Ronin were first Samurai but if a Samurai's Shogon or Daimyo dies they are no longer their vassels and are free to raom sworn to no-one. Ronin were usually Mercs. The Samurai were used as the perfect fighting machine and were basically in a sense Japanese Knights or vassels.
The warrior class of Japan were known as the Bushi. They are more commonly referred to as Samurai.
what is the connection between shintoand the samurai class
samuri is samuri in Japanese but the collective is bushi a samurai, many bushi
not much bro
Samurai was a status. All daimyo and shogun were of samurai status. Bushi was a warrior. If you would "rank" them, it would be: Bushi-Daimyo-Shogun.
Samurai
The difference between a shogun and a samurai is like the difference between a king and a knight.
A ronin is a samurai. Samurai was a status in Japan. A ronin was simply someone of samurai status that had no clan affiliation.
Yosuke Watanabe has written: 'Musashi bushi' -- subject(s): Samurai, Bushido, History
The Japanese refer to the Samurai as Bushido. This refers to members of the military nobility prior to modern times. Bushi means warrior, and Bushido means the way of the warrior.
Japan.
The term "bushi" in Chinese can have different meanings depending on the context. It can refer to a military officer or warrior in ancient China, similar to a samurai in Japan. It can also mean "unsuccessful" or "not up to standard" in a more contemporary sense. Additionally, "bushi" can be used as a negation word, equivalent to "not" or "don't."
Samurai were the members of the ruling/military class during the feudal periods of Japanese History. The word samurai means "to serve", in reference to the principal value of their code of conduct, Bushido, which was loyalty. A samurai's existence had a single purpose, to live and die in the service of his lord.Samurai, also known as Bushido, was the later name of the warrior in the Bushi code. Bushi means warrior and Bushido means the way of the warrior then later Bushido was replaced with Samurai however you do not pronounce it Samuraido just Samurai. Samurai means the way of the warrior in Japanese.
A samurai is comparable to a medieval knight not just anyone can be one they have to be a descendant from another samurai and they have to train for years. A regular soldier is just anyone who was inlisted or joined the military.