Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
El Soldado, an 1892 play by Adolfo León Gómez "El Soldado", a song recorded by Barbarito Díez "Soldados", a 1985 song recorded by Legião Urbana 'El Soldado', an Argentine band featuring Skay Beilinson; Los Soldados, a 2013 novel by Pablo Aranda; Sicario: Day of the Soldado, a 2018 film, sequel to the 2015 film Sicario
For instance, the feminine form of el soldado 'the (male) soldier' is la soldado 'the (female) soldier', with only the gender of the article (el/la) distinguishing them in this case. For nouns of this class with the masculine form ending in -or , -ón , -ín , -és , and -án , the feminine form adds an -a .
Private first class (French: Soldat de 1 re classe; Spanish: Soldado de primera) is a military rank held by junior enlisted personnel in many armed forces. French speaking countries [ edit ]
During the Battle of Oaxaca, general Ignacio Rayón led a revolt against the Spanish Royal Forces. Cannons were a valuable weapon as they were an excellent way of attacking bastions or reducing infantry forces.
The designation of "goumiers" was originally given to tribal irregulars employed as allies by the French Army in southern Algeria. [4] These mounted auxiliaries operated under their own tribal leadership and were entirely distinct from the regular Muslim cavalry and infantry regiments of the French Armée d'Afrique. [5]
Histoire du soldat, or Tale of the Soldier (as it was first published), [1] is an hour-long 1918 theatrical work to be "read, played and danced (lue, jouée et dansée)" by three actors, one or more dancers, and a septet of instruments.
Juan Francisco Reyes (1749–1809), soldado de cuera ("leather-jacketed soldier") on the 1769 Portola expedition, alcalde (municipal magistrate) of the Pueblo de Los Angeles for three terms, and recipient of the Spanish land grant for Rancho Los Encinos and later Lompoc.
A tercio (pronounced), Spanish for "[a] third") was a military unit of the Spanish Army during the reign of the Catholic Monarchs of Spain and Habsburg Spain in the early modern period.