soldiers in
Victoria, 1941 In most armies, the word "soldier" has a general meaning that refers to all members of an army, distinct from more specialized military occupations that require different areas of knowledge and skill sets. "Soldiers" may be referred to by titles, names,
nicknames, or
acronyms that reflect an individual's military occupation specialty arm, service, or branch of military employment, their type of unit, or operational employment or technical use such as:
trooper,
tanker (a member of tank crew),
commando,
dragoon,
infantryman,
guardsman,
artilleryman,
paratrooper,
grenadier,
ranger,
sniper,
engineer,
sapper,
craftsman,
signaller,
medic,
rifleman, or
gunner, among other terms. Some of these designations, or their
etymological origins, have existed in English for centuries. In contrast, others are relatively recent, reflecting changes in technology, an increased
division of labor, or other factors. In the United States Army, a soldier's military job is designated as a
Military Occupational Specialty (MOS), which includes a very wide array of MOS Branches and sub-specialties. One example of a nickname for a soldier in a specific occupation is the term "red caps" to refer to
military policemen personnel in the
British Army because of the colour of their headgear.
Infantry are sometimes called "grunts" in the
United States Army (as well as in the
U.S. Marine Corps) or "squaddies" (in the British Army). U.S. Army artillery crews, or "gunners," are sometimes referred to as "redlegs", from the service branch color for
artillery. U.S. soldiers are often called "
G.I.s" (short for the term "Government Issue"). Such terms may be associated with particular
wars or historical eras. "G.I." came into common use during and after
World War II, but before and during
World War I, especially, American soldiers were called "
Doughboys." In contrast, British infantry troops were often referred to as
"Tommies" (short for the archetypal soldier "Tommy Atkins") and French infantry were called
"Poilus" ("hairy ones"). and
French soldiers during a water obstacle training exercise, 2022 Some formal or informal designations may reflect the status or changes in status of soldiers for reasons of
gender,
race, or other social factors. With certain exceptions, service as a soldier, especially in the infantry, had generally been restricted to males throughout world history. By World War II, women were actively deployed in
Allied forces in different ways. Some notable female soldiers in the
Soviet Union were
honored as "
Heroes of the Soviet Union" for their actions in the army or as
partisan fighters. In the United Kingdom, women served in the
Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) and later in the
Women's Royal Army Corps (WRAC). Soon after it entered the war, the U.S. formed the
Women's Army Corps, whose female soldiers were often referred to as "WACs." These sex-segregated branches were disbanded in the last decades of the twentieth century, and women soldiers were integrated into the standing branches of the military. However, their ability to serve in armed combat was often restricted. Race has historically been an issue that has restricted the ability of some people to serve in the U.S. Army. Until the
American Civil War, Black soldiers fought in integrated and sometimes separate units, but at other times were not allowed to serve, largely due to fears about the possible effects of such service on the institution of legal
slavery. Some Black soldiers, both freemen and men who had escaped from slavery, served in the
Union Army until 1863, when the
Emancipation Proclamation opened the door for the formation of Black units. After the war, Black soldiers continued to serve, but in segregated units, often subjected to physical and verbal racist abuse. The term "
Buffalo Soldiers" was applied to some units that fought in the 19th-century
American Indian Wars in the American West. Eventually, the phrase was applied more generally to segregated Black units, who often distinguished themselves in armed conflict and other services. In 1948, President
Harry S. Truman issued an
executive order for the end of segregation in the
United States Armed Forces. ==Service==