Indian Army . check the records/wiki/journals period !
Georgy Zhukov .
It isn't but it could be. With a conjunction and two separate independent clauses, it could be two sentences. The best way to phrase it is as a compound predicate with one subject:"Mike joined the Army and became more disciplined during the training."
Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben
Major Gen. George Brinton McClellan.
Redcoats can be described as "uniformed soldiers" and "disciplined troops." Their iconic red uniforms symbolize their affiliation with the British army during the American Revolutionary War, while their disciplined nature reflects their training and military organization.
Loyal and self disciplined
Pakistan army
Was his description disciplined and dutiful.
Harold was very unlucky in The Battle of Hastings because his army was poorly disciplined and they were very tired because they had just been fighting in the North. You can tell that his army were badly disciplined because whenever William's army pretended to retreat, Harold's army followed, meaning it was easy for them to be killed. Harold however, was a good leader just due to the failure of his army he was not able to use them as best as he could.
The best. It is far stronger then its size. It has excellent technology, well disciplined troops and the strongest commandos in the world.
The army was well-supplied and regularly paid
Their well equipped and disciplined army
Not exactly, but it needs punctuation: "Mike joined the army, and he became more disciplined during the training." But even then it's not an elegant sentence. A better way would be: After joining the army, Mike became more disciplined as a result of the training. OR Mike's army training made him more disciplined. Some people use the term "run-on sentence" to mean a sentence that is long and rambling. But as an actual grammatical error, run-on refers to two sentences that are stuck together as one. For example, "Mike joined the army he became more disciplined during the training."
Georgy Zhukov .
It isn't but it could be. With a conjunction and two separate independent clauses, it could be two sentences. The best way to phrase it is as a compound predicate with one subject:"Mike joined the Army and became more disciplined during the training."
Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben
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