Dictionary Definition
veteran adj : rendered competent through trial
and experience; "troops seasoned in combat"; "a seasoned traveler";
"veteran steadiness"; "a veteran officer" [syn: seasoned, veteran(a)]
Noun
1 a serviceman who has seen considerable active
service; "the veterans laughed at the new recruits" [syn: veteran
soldier]
2 a person who has served in the armed forces
[syn: vet, ex-serviceman]
3 an experienced person who has been through many
battles; someone who has given long service [syn: old-timer,
oldtimer, old hand,
warhorse, old stager,
stager]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A person with long experience of a particular activity.
- A person who has served in the armed forces, especially an old soldier who has seen long service.
Derived terms
Translations
Old soldier
- Danish: veteran
- Finnish: sotaveteraani, veteraani
- Russian: ветеран
- Swedish: veteran
Adjective
Translations
Related to former members of armed forces
Danish
Noun
veteranDerived terms
Swedish
Noun
veteran- veteran; former member of armed forces
- veteran, person with long experience
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
A veteran (from Latin vetus, meaning
"old") is a person who is experienced in a particular area, and is
particularly used in Russia, Canada and the
United
States to refer to people with experience in the armed forces
or law
enforcement.
The most common usage is for former armed
services personnel. A veteran is one who has served in the armed
forces, but usually not someone who had a dishonorable discharge.
It is especially applied to those who served for an entire career,
usually of 20 years or more, but may be applied for someone who has
only served one tour of duty.
A common misconception is that one had to have
either been in combat and/or has retired from active duty to be
called a military veteran. Because of this widely held
misconception,
women have sometime excluded themselves from veterans groups or
benefits, despite military service. Each state (of the United
States) sets specific criteria for state-specific veterans
benefits. For federal medical benefits from the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals, prior to Sept.
7, 1980 the veteran must have served at least 180 days of active
duty, after the above-mentioned date, the veteran must have served
at least 24 months. However, if the veteran was medically
discharged and receives a VA service-connected disability stipend,
the time limits are not applicable.
For most of history there were no fixed standing
armies. Almost all warriors were militia, usually farmers for the
bulk of the year, who thus had a secondary occupation to support
them during times of peace. The first state to face significant
veterans' affairs problems was the Roman
Empire, whose professional army of career soldiers needed some
new role when they retired. They were usually given land in the
newly conquered locales, and the need for such lands motivated the
empire's expansion. They could also voluntarily enlist again at the
invitation of the consul
or other commander as evocati.
Beyond giving veterans free or discounted lands
in colonies,
governments did little about them. There was little or no aid for
veterans suffering mental or physical disabilities, and those
wounded in war often had to turn to begging or crime.
Abraham Lincoln famously called for good
treatment of those who have borne the battle, and their widows and
infants. The American Civil War produced veterans organizations,
such as the Grand Army of the Republic. The treatment of veterans
changed after the First World
War. In the years following, discontented veterans became a
source of instability. They could quickly organize, had links to
the army, and often had arms themselves. Veterans played a central
role in the post-World War I instability of Germany, while in
the United
States, the Bonus Army of
unemployed veterans was one of the most important protest movements
of the Great
Depression, marching on Washington, DC to get a claimed bonus
that Congress had promised them.
After the Second World
War, in part due to the experience of the First World War, most
of the participating states set up elaborate veterans'
administrations. Within the United States, it was veterans groups
like the American Legion and VFW that pushed for and got the G.I.
Bill enacted. These gave war heros access to free or subsidized
education and health care. The newly educated GIs created a
significant economic impact, and with the aid of VA loans were able
to buy housing and establish themselves as part of a growing
American middle class. The explosion of the suburbs created sufficient
housing for veterans and their families. In the United States,
black veterans continued to be denied equality at home despite
President Truman's desegregation of the military during World War
II. Black veterans went on to play a central role in the Civil Rights
movement.
For the most part, veterans are treated with
great respect in society. In Russia, a tradition was established
after the second world war, where newly married couples would on
their wedding day visit a military cemetery. In France, for
instance, those wounded in war are given the first claim on any
seat on public
transit. Most countries have a holiday such as Remembrance
Day to honour veterans, along with the war dead. There are
exceptions to this: veterans of unpopular conflicts, such as the
Vietnam
War, have been discriminated against. Others, such as veterans
of minor conflicts like the Korean War,
are often forgotten when compared with those who fought in the
World Wars.
Women have served in
the United States military for over two hundred years, often having
had to disguise themselves as men. Female veterans have often been
discriminated against by their male counterparts and, as such,
women who have served in the armed forces have sometimes been known
as "the invisible veterans". Women were not fully
recognized as veterans until after WWII, and prior to this they
were not eligible for VA benefits. The VA estimates that by the
year 2010 women will make up 10% of the veteran population. A
tri-state (Washington, Idaho Oregon) women veterans conference in
Pendleton Oregon. In April 2008 attracted 362 women veterans,
according to the East Oregonian newspaper.
Many veterans' groups are politically active.
They may appear in the media or hold
rallies
and protests. Issues may
include improved benefits for veterans and support for or
opposition to pacifist movements.
See also
- List of veterans' organizations
- Iraq War Veterans Organization
- American Legion
- Demobilization
- United States Department of Veterans Affairs
- Read Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding Veterans
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Marine Corps Veteran Resources
- Veterans Agency, an executive agency of the United Kingdom's Ministry of Defence
- Veterans of Foreign Wars, a different U.S. Veterans Organization.
- Veterans Day, an American holiday celebrating veterans
- Vietnam veteran
- Surviving veterans of the First World War
- Returned and Services League of Australia
- Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association (New Zealand's largest veterans' organization)
- Royal Canadian Legion (Canada's organization supporting veterans worldwide)
- The Royal British Legion (The United Kingdom's veterans society, formed in 1921)
- Filipino Veterans Fairness Act
References
veteran in German: Veteran
veteran in Spanish: Veterano
veteran in French: Vétéran
veteran in Dutch: Veteraan
veteran in Japanese: 退役軍人
veteran in Polish: Weteran
veteran in Finnish: Veteraani
veteran in Swedish: Krigsveteran
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Father Time, Methuselah, Nestor, Old Paar, blase, campaigner, centenarian, cosmopolitan, cosmopolite, dotard, elder, experienced, expert, gaffer, geezer, golden-ager, gramps, grandfather, grandsire, graybeard, knowing, master, mature, matured, nonagenarian, not born
yesterday, octogenarian, old, old campaigner, old chap, old
codger, old dog, old duffer, old geezer, old gent, old gentleman,
old hand, old man, old party, old pro, old salt, old sea dog, old
soldier, old-time, old-timer, older, oldster, pantaloon, past master,
patriarch, practical, practiced, presbyter, ripe, ripened, sagacious, salt, seasoned, seasoned veteran,
senior citizen, septuagenarian, sexagenarian, shellback, skilled, sophisticated, the
quiet-voiced elders, tried, tried and true, trouper, venerable sir, versed, vet, war-horse, warhorse, wise, world-wise, worldly,
worldly-wise