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The proper noun for the noun soldier is the name of the soldier or a member of a specific armed forces, such as US Army Major; Private First Class, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force; or Canadian Army Chief Warrant Officer.
Well, "He marched off to class like a soldier on a mission," is a metaphor. It just happens to be a simile too.Here's the thing: all similes are metaphors, but not all metaphors are similes. Both are comparisons made between dissimilar things; a simile just does it using "like" or "as."If you wish to keep it a metaphor but make it no longer a simile, remove the like and insert a comma: "He marched off to class, a soldier on a mission."
'un soldat de 2ème classe' is a 'second-class soldier', the lower rank of militarymen in France.
A samurai was exactly like a soldier. They were trained in many different weapons, and obeyed their daimyo (lord/commander), regardless of what the order was, so pretty much exactly like a modern-day soldier. I'm speaking of course about the samurai class in general, not individuals, as samurai were obviously very different people when compared to modern day soldiers.
The possessive form of the singular noun soldier is soldier's.example: The soldier's mother was so happy to see him.