Usually military personnel who have received expensive enough training to justify that are called officers, but there are definitely some exceptions.
That isn’t a counterargument. “Officer” is a (category of) rank, not a job description. A whole lot of actual military “action” work is in fact performed by officers, particularly if it involves high levels of skill. (For example, pilots are usually officers.)
No, “soldier”, at least in U.S. military jargon, means “member of the Army” (as opposed to the other services). The Army chief-of-staff, a four-star general, will refer to themselves as a “soldier”.
That isn’t a counterargument. “Officer” is a (category of) rank, not a job description. A whole lot of actual military “action” work is in fact performed by officers, particularly if it involves high levels of skill. (For example, pilots are usually officers.)
Yes, they are. But I’ve never heard a pilot called a soldier. This goes for most jobs performed by people in the O Ranks.
I am using Soldier to be interchangeable with Enlisted Man since I’ve seen and heard it used that way myself.
I assumed it was used that way in context, but maybe it wasn’t.
No, “soldier”, at least in U.S. military jargon, means “member of the Army” (as opposed to the other services). The Army chief-of-staff, a four-star general, will refer to themselves as a “soldier”.