Commandership isn't a word, ur old and Special person and made it up.
You are easily the least intelligent poster in this thread.
Commandership is a word. Leadership is a word. Stewardship is a word. Apprenticeship is a word. Wikipedia recognized them all as being words. A writer really should know this.
Here is another helping hand for you in your quest trying to be a writer..... You really should give up trying to appear to be somehow superior, though, Ares. I've embarrassing you once more. And for someone calling himself a terrific writer, you have once again been found wanting
THIS FROM DICTIONARY.COM
commander
[kuh-man-der, -mahn-]
Word Origin
noun
1.
a person who commands.
2.
a person who exercises authority; chief officer; leader.
3.
the commissioned officer in command of a military unit.
4.
U.S. Navy. an officer ranking below a captain and above a lieutenant commander.
5.
a police officer in charge of a precinct or other unit.
6.
the chief officer of a commandery in the medieval orders of Knights Hospitalers, Knights Templars, and others.
7.
a member of one of the higher classes or ranks in certain modern fraternal orders, as in the Knights Templars.
Origin of commander
Middle English
Old French
1250-1300
1250-1300; Middle English < Old French comandere, equivalent to comand(er) to command + -ere < Latin -ātōr- -ator
Related forms
commandership, noun
subcommander, noun
subcommandership, noun
undercommander, noun
"ARMYS" is not a word, however. IT is not the plural of army.That would be the word armies. IF you put an ' between the Y and the S it would be the possessive case for Army. Please take this into consideration when you attempt your next literary work.