corporal= cpl.
Hitler was a brave soldier: he was promoted to the rank of Corporal, was wounded twice (in 1916 and 1918) and was awarded several medals. The German Army rank he achieved was 'Gefreiter'. This is equivalent to 'lance-corporal' in the British army, and 'private first-class' in the US army.A Corporal.
Corporal. Note: An E3 in the Marine Corps is called a lance corporal; a rank which to the best of my knowledge only exists in the British Army and the US Marines. A lance corporal is the highest enlisted rank, and a corporal is the lowest non-commissioned officer rank.
Lieutenant, Sergeant, Corporal, Private.
Corporal John F. Mackie, Corporal, USMC, first Marine to win the Medal of Honor. Smedley Butler, Major, USMC, two awards, Veracruz and Haiti. Dan Daly, Gunnery Sergeant, USMC, two awards, Boxer Rebellion and Haiti,
A Corporal in the German Army
In the US Army, there's two ranks - Specialist, and Corporal. In the US Marines, it's just Corporal. The Specialist rank in the Army is not an NCO rank, whereas Corporal is.
Lance Corporal = LCpl.
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.
In the US, Regular Army is RA.
The rank of Lance Corporal does not exist in the United States Army (I'm assuming that's the Army you were referring to since it was categorised in the US Army category). British and Commonwealth armies have the rank.
USA (US Army), USN (US Navy), USMC (US Marine Corps), USAF (US Air Force), USCG (US Coast Guard).
For the U.S. Army this would be the rank of Corporal.
A corporal is a rank in the army
In the US Army, it's SSG.
CC
CRS is commonly used by the US Army for "Course"
The French equivalent of corporal is Caporal.