Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - What are the Japanese versions of the word "general" as a title?

What are the Japanese versions of the word "general" as a title?

There was only one general (しょぅぐんぃぃぃだぃしょぅぅぅぅぅぅ) in Japan's shogunate era.

Yuanlaichao (the eldest brother of Yuan Yijing) was the first general, and Toyotomi Hideyoshi (the retainer of Nonobunaga Oda) was the first general who initiated the Xuanping-Hebei War in Kamakura era, followed by Edo era and Tokugawa Ieyasu.

Of course, their successor is nominally a general, but his power is not as great as that of the first generation, because there are "family elders" under the general to govern. Later generals, like emperors, ate and drank all day and were in charge of things.

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In the modern sense, Japanese generals are called "General", "Lieutenant General" and "Major General".

In sports competitions, there are "Wang Jiang" (ぉぅしょぅ means commander in chief) and "Zhu Jiang".

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