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Police   /pəlˈis/   Listen
noun
Police  n.  
1.
A judicial and executive system, for the government of a city, town, or district, for the preservation of rights, order, cleanliness, health, etc., and for the enforcement of the laws and prevention of crime; the administration of the laws and regulations of a city, incorporated town, or borough.
2.
That which concerns the order of the community; the internal regulation of a state.
3.
The organized body of civil officers in a city, town, or district, whose particular duties are the preservation of good order, the prevention and detection of crime, and the enforcement of the laws.
4.
(Mil.) Military police, the body of soldiers detailed to preserve civil order and attend to sanitary arrangements in a camp or garrison.
5.
The cleaning of a camp or garrison, or the state of a camp as to cleanliness.
Police commissioner, a civil officer, usually one of a board, commissioned to regulate and control the appointment, duties, and discipline of the police.
Police constable, or Police officer, a policeman.
Police court, a minor court to try persons brought before it by the police.
Police inspector, an officer of police ranking next below a superintendent.
Police jury, a body of officers who collectively exercise jurisdiction in certain cases of police, as levying taxes, etc.; so called in Louisiana.
Police justice, or Police magistrate, a judge of a police court.
Police offenses (Law), minor offenses against the order of the community, of which a police court may have final jurisdiction.
Police station, the headquarters of the police, or of a section of them; the place where the police assemble for orders, and to which they take arrested persons.



verb
Police  v. t.  (past & past part. policed; pres. part. policing)  
1.
To keep in order by police.
2.
(Mil.) To make clean; as, to police a camp.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Police" Quotes from Famous Books



... would all fall down and worship Him. It may have been so; but if the man who best represents the ideas of early Christians were to enter a respectable society of to-day, would it not be more likely to send for the police? When we consider such changes, and mark in another direction how the dogmas which once set half the world to cut the throats of the other half, have sunk into mere combinations of hard words, can we seriously look to the maintenance of dogmas, even in the teeth ...
— Social Rights and Duties, Volume I (of 2) - Addresses to Ethical Societies • Sir Leslie Stephen

... constables I drew to the life; nor did I forget a certain Sol Glenhart, as rotten a police judge as was to be found between the seas. And this I say out of a vast experience. While he was notorious in local trampdom, his civic sins were not only not unknown but a crying reproach to the townspeople. Of course ...
— Moon-Face and Other Stories • Jack London

... "Five o'clock and cloudy skies." Thus one could lie safe in bed and if he chanced to waken could know that the friendly rattle-watch was near at hand, and what was the weather and the time of night. In 1658 New York had in all ten watchmen, who were like our modern police; to-day ...
— Home Life in Colonial Days • Alice Morse Earle

... true—six belonging to the port watch and two to the starboard—who had resisted all the alluring dreams of fortunes to be made in a day at the diggings. The other eight had deserted in a body one Sunday, very cleverly eluding the police, whose chief duty it then was to prevent such occurrences. The second mate and the cook were also missing. Hence Captain Staunton's anxiety. On the one hand, he was averse to the extreme step of taking his ship to sea half-manned; and on the other, ...
— The Pirate Island - A Story of the South Pacific • Harry Collingwood

... public sense) of some who had preceded him, and the singular anxiety with which he distinguished between the lights and shadows of their examples. He imitated the great Dictator, Julius, in his vigilance of inspection into the civil, not less than the martial police of his times, shaping his new regulations to meet abuses as they arose, and strenuously maintaining the old ones in vigorous operation. As respected the army, this was matter of peculiar praise, because peculiarly disinterested; for his foreign policy was pacific; [Footnote: "Expeditiones ...
— The Caesars • Thomas de Quincey


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