A Tommy or Tommie.
The term British Soldiers applies to all soldier of the United Kingdom, and historically all soldiers of the British Empire.
There are quite a few names: Ground pounder Grunt GI (only in the US though) soldier
Tommy was the common term for a British soldier. Just like "Billy Yank" in the Civil War or "GI Joe" for the American soldier in WW2. The name came from Thomas Atkins, The soldiers name on the specimen sign-up papers. BTW, the term "GI" in the US Army was an abbreviation for "Government Issue". Everything that the soldier owned was labeled as "Government Issue", so they adopted that term for them.
Old term: Tommy, refers to WW2 and before.New term: Squaddie, generally referring to other ranks and those in training.
The song is The British Soldier by Harvey Andrews.
No he was not, if he signed the declaration and was a founding father he probably was not a British soldier.
A doppel soldier is a type of soldier who resembles another person, sometimes referred to as a double or lookalike. This term is often used in fiction or in the context of espionage and impersonation.
he was a soldier and a lawyer for the british war he was a soldier and a lawyer for the british war
Tom Brown - British Army soldier - died in 1746.
Tom Brown - British Army soldier - was born in 1705.
Ian Bailey - British Army soldier - was born in 1959.
Peter King - British soldier - was born on 1916-10-30.