The Latin word for warlord is soluto. A warlord is a military commander, especially an aggressive regional commander with individual autonomy.
It came from Latin. capitaneus - (in late latin) means military commander. the word caput means head. The first man who was called "captain" as a rank was French.
The Latin American countries were ruled by military leaders called the Junta. The word Junta simply means a senior army commander.
A Centurion -- Cent being the latin prefix for 100.Well, generally, a century was made up of only 80 men, so there was no commander of a hundred men.A Centurian
Emperor comes from middle English via old French and ultimately from the Latin imperator meaning military commander.
Imperator was a title originally roughly equivalent to commander during the period of the Roman Republic.The English word emperor derives from the Latin word "imperator", via its French descendent empereur. There is no direct Latin equivalent of the English word emperor...Commander.
Commander Root. Or, maybe, Commander Sool. Or, Commander Vinyaya. Or, Commander Kelp.
"commander-in-chief" is what you are looking for.
what is more powerful L.T commander or a commander ?
No. Commander is a job title (e.g., Company Commander, Battalion Commander, Brigade Commander, Division Commander, Corps Commander, etc.), but not a rank. Lieutenant Commander and Commander exist as ranks only in the Navy. Lieutenant Commander is equivalent to a Major in the Army, Air Force, and Marines, and Commander is equivalent is Lieutenant Colonel in the Army, Air Force, and Marines.
No, the word commander is not an adverb.The word commander is in fact a noun.
You don't get a supreme commander in the game supreme commander 2.