Soldiers is a noun; a plural, common noun.
Collective nouns for soldiers include:
A company of soldiers
A boast of soldiers
A division of soldiers
A muster of soldiers
A phalanx of soldiers
A platoon of soldiers
A troop of soldiers
A squad of soldiers
An army of soldiers
A brigade of soldiers
All the naming words are nouns. The same applies to soldiers. It is a noun. It really depends on how it is used. It can be used as a noun or a verb. The soldiers moved through the battlefield. Noun He soldiers through the toil and trouble. Verb.
Common
The possessive form for the plural noun soldiers is soldiers'.Example: The soldiers' march took them across a river.
The plural noun soldiers has two syllables. Sol-diers.
The word 'soldiers' is a mass-noun - without reference to either gender.
The collective noun starting with 're' is a regiment of soldiers.
All the naming words are nouns. The same applies to soldiers. It is a noun. It really depends on how it is used. It can be used as a noun or a verb. The soldiers moved through the battlefield. Noun He soldiers through the toil and trouble. Verb.
The collective noun for soldiers that starts with S is squad.
The noun regiment is a collective noun for:a regiment of flamingosa regiment of soldiers
soldiers.
Common
The noun clause is 'Did you see the Russian soldiers...'; the noun clause is functioning as the subject of the sentence.
A collective noun is a squad of soldiers.
The possessive form for the plural noun soldiers is soldiers'.Example: The soldiers' march took them across a river.
Yes, the noun regiment is a collective noun for a regiment of flamingos.
The plural noun soldiers has two syllables. Sol-diers.
The noun 'Soldier Field' is a singular, concrete, proper noun; the name of a football stadium in Chicago, IL.A proper noun is always capitalized.