English-Thai Dictionary
Police General
N พลตำรวจเอก pon-tam-rued-aek
Police Lieutenant General
N พลตำรวจโท pon-tam-rued-to
Police Major General
N พลตำรวจตรี pon-tam-rued-tre
police
N ี่ การ ดูแลรักษา ความสงบเรียบร้อย ของ ชุมชน kan-du-lea-rak-sa-kwam-sa-ngob
police
N ี่ ตำรวจ ผู้พิทักษ์สันติราษฎร์ เจ้าหน้าที่ตำรวจ policeman patrol guard tam-rued
police
VT ควบคุม รักษา ความสงบเรียบร้อย control patrol watch kub-kum
police
VT ทำความสะอาด tam-kwam-sa-aed
police dog
N สุนัขตำรวจ su-nak-tam-rued
police station
N สถานีตำรวจ headquarters sa-ta-ne-tam-rued
policeman
N ตำรวจ ตำรวจ ผู้พิทักษ์สันติราษฎร์ เจ้าหน้าที่ตำรวจ police officer tam-rued
policewoman
N ตำรวจ หญิง tam-rued-ying
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
POLICE
n.[L. politia; Gr. city. ] 1. The government of a city or town; the administration of the laws and regulations of a city or incorporated town or borough; as the police of London, of New York or Boston. The word is applied also to the government of all towns in New England which are made corporations by a general statute, for certain purposes.
2. The internal regulation and government of a kingdom or state.
3. The corporation or body of men governing a city.
4. In Scottish, the pleasure-ground about a gentleman's seat.
POLICED
a.Regulated by laws; furnished with a regular system of laws and administration.
POLICE-OFFICER
n.An officer entrusted with the execution of the laws of a city.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
POLICE
Po *lice ", n. Etym: [F., fr. L. politia the condition of a state, government, administration, Gr. pur, puri. Cf. Policy polity, Polity. ]
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. )
Defn: 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 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. Bouvier. -- 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.
POLICE
Po *lice ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Policed; p. pr. & vb. n. Policing. ]
1. To keep in order by police.
2. (Mil. )
Defn: To make clean; as, to police a camp.
POLICED
POLICED Po *liced ", a.
Defn: Regulated by laws for the maintenance of peace and order, enforced by organized administration. "A policed kingdom. " Howell.
POLICEMAN
Po *lice "man, n.; pl. Policemen (.
Defn: A member of a body of police; a constable.
POLICE POWER
POLICE POWER Police power. (Law )
Defn: The inherent power of a government to regulate its police affairs. The term police power is not definitely fixed in meaning. In the earlier cases in the United States it was used as including the whole power of internal government, or the powers of government inherent in every sovereignty to the extent of its dominions (11 Peters (U. S.) 1 2 ). The later cases have excepted from its domain the development and administration of private law. Modern political science defines the power as a branch of internal administration in the exercise of which the executive should move within the lines of general principles prescribed by the constitution or the legislature, and in the exercise of which the most local governmental organizations should participate as far as possible (Burgess ). Under this limitation the police power, as affecting persons, is the power of the state to protect the public against the abuse of individual liberty, that is, to restrain the individual in the exercise of his rights when such exercise becomes a danger to the community. The tendency of judicial and popular usage is towards this narrower definition.
New American Oxford Dictionary
police
po lice |pəˈlēs pəˈlis | ▶noun (treated as pl., usu. the police ) the civil force of a national or local government, responsible for the prevention and detection of crime and the maintenance of public order. • members of a police force: there are fewer women police than men. • [ with modifier ] an organization engaged in the enforcement of official regulations in a specified domain: transit police | figurative, humorous : the fashion police. ▶verb [ with obj. ] (often as noun policing ) (of a police force ) have the duty of maintaining law and order in or for (an area or event ). • enforce regulations or an agreement in (a particular area or domain ): a UN resolution to use military force to police the no-fly zone. • enforce the provisions of (a law, agreement, or treaty ): the regulations will be policed by factory inspectors. • maintain order and neatness in (an area, as a military camp ). ORIGIN late 15th cent. (in the sense ‘public order ’): from French, from medieval Latin politia ‘citizenship, government ’ (see policy 1 ). Current senses date from the early 19th cent.
police constable
po lice con sta ble |pəˈlis ˈkɑnstəbəl | ▶noun see constable.
police dog
po lice dog |pəˈlis dɔɡ | ▶noun a dog, esp. a German shepherd, trained for use in police work. • informal a German shepherd.
police force
po lice force |pəˈlis fɔrs | ▶noun an organized body of police officers responsible for a country, district, or town.
police informer
po ¦lice in |form ¦er ▶noun a person who gives police information about crimes and offenders.
police jury
po lice ju ry ▶noun an elected governing body in most Louisiana parishes, corresponding to a county board of commissioners in other states. DERIVATIVES po lice ju ror noun
policeman
po lice man |pəˈlēsmən pəˈlismən | ▶noun ( pl. policemen ) a member of a police force.
police officer
po lice of fi cer |pəˈlis ˈɔfəsər | ▶noun a policeman or policewoman.
police procedural
po lice pro ce dur al ▶noun a crime novel in which the emphasis is on the procedures used by the police in solving the crime.
police record
po ¦lice re ¦cord ▶noun (usu. police records ) a dossier kept by the police on all people convicted of crime. • (a police record ) a personal history which includes some conviction for crime: a well-known character with a police record.
police state
po lice state |pəˈlis ˈsteɪt | ▶noun a totalitarian state controlled by a political police force that secretly supervises the citizens' activities.
police station
po lice sta tion |pəˈlis ˈsteɪʃən | ▶noun the office or headquarters of a local police force.
policewoman
po lice wom an |pəˈlēsˌwo͝omən pəˈlisˌwʊmən | ▶noun ( pl. policewomen ) a female member of a police force.
Oxford Dictionary
police
po ¦lice |pəˈliːs | ▶noun [ treated as pl. ] (usu. the police ) the civil force of a state, responsible for the prevention and detection of crime and the maintenance of public order. • members of a police force: there are fewer women police than men. • [ with adj. or noun modifier ] an organization engaged in the enforcement of official regulations in a specified domain: transport police. ▶verb [ with obj. ] (of a police force ) have the duty of maintaining law and order in or at (an area or event ): (as noun policing ) : a ten-point plan to improve policing. • enforce regulations or an agreement in (a particular area or domain ): a UN resolution to use military force to police the no-fly zone. • enforce the provisions of (a law, agreement, or treaty ): the regulations will be policed by factory inspectors. ORIGIN late 15th cent. (in the sense ‘public order ’): from French, from medieval Latin politia ‘citizenship, government ’ (see policy 1 ). Current senses date from the early 19th cent.
police constable
po ¦lice con |stable ▶noun see constable.
police dog
po ¦lice dog ▶noun a dog, especially an Alsatian, trained for use in police work.
police force
po ¦lice force ▶noun an organized body of police officers responsible for a country, district, or town.
police informer
po ¦lice in |form ¦er ▶noun a person who gives police information about crimes and offenders.
police jury
po lice ju ry ▶noun an elected governing body in most Louisiana parishes, corresponding to a county board of commissioners in other states. DERIVATIVES po lice ju ror noun
policeman
po ¦lice |man |pəˈliːsmən | ▶noun ( pl. policemen ) a male member of a police force.
Police Motu
Police Motu ▶noun see Motu.
police officer
po ¦lice of ¦fi |cer ▶noun a policeman or policewoman.
police procedural
po ¦lice pro |ced ¦ural ▶noun chiefly N. Amer. a crime novel in which the emphasis is on the procedures used by the police in solving the crime.
police record
po ¦lice re ¦cord ▶noun (usu. police records ) a dossier kept by the police on all people convicted of crime. • (a police record ) a personal history which includes some conviction for crime: a well-known character with a police record.
police state
po ¦lice state ▶noun a totalitarian state controlled by a political police force that secretly supervises the citizens' activities.
police station
po ¦lice sta |tion ▶noun the office or headquarters of a local police force.
policewoman
po ¦lice |woman |pəˈliːswʊmən | ▶noun ( pl. policewomen ) a female member of a police force.
American Oxford Thesaurus
police
police noun we phoned the police as soon as we heard the collision: police force, police officers, policemen, policewomen, officers of the law, law officers, authorities, constabulary; informal cops, fuzz, law, long arm of the law, boys /men in blue; coppers, force, heat. ▶verb 1 we must police the area: guard, watch over, protect, defend, patrol; control, regulate. 2 the regulations will be policed by the ministry: enforce, regulate, oversee, supervise, monitor, observe, check.
police officer
police officer noun she ran out of the store, hoping to find a police officer nearby: policeman, policewoman, officer, officer of the law, law officer, patrolman; constable, sergeant, inspector, corporal, captain, lieutenant, superintendent; informal cop, flatfoot, copper.
Oxford Thesaurus
police
police noun police force, police officers, policemen, policewomen, officers of the law, the forces of law and order, law-enforcement officers, law-enforcement agency; Brit. constabulary; Scottish & Irish polis; French gendarmerie; German Polizei; Italian carabinieri; historical watch; informal the cops, the fuzz, the law, the Man, the boys in blue, the long arm of the law; Brit. informal the (Old ) Bill; coppers, rozzers, bobbies, busies, bizzies, the force, plod, PC Plod; N. Amer. informal the heat, …'s finest; informal, derogatory pigs, the filth; black English, derogatory Babylon. ▶verb 1 it would not be possible to police the area effectively: maintain law and order in, keep the peace in, keep guard over, keep watch on, watch over, guard, protect, defend, patrol, make the rounds of. 2 the cost of policing the demonstration: control, keep in order, keep under control, regulate. 3 the regulations will be policed by Environmental Health officers: enforce, regulate, implement, oversee, check (up on ), supervise, monitor, observe, watch.
police officer
police officer noun policeman, policewoman, officer of the law, law-enforcement officer /agent, officer; Brit. constable; N. Amer. patrolman, trooper, roundsman, peace officer; Indian kotwal, jawan; French gendarme; informal cop, jack, uniform; Brit. informal copper, bobby, rozzer, busy, bizzy, plod, PC Plod; N. Amer. informal bear; Austral. /NZ informal walloper, demon; French informal flic; informal, derogatory pig; informal, dated flatfoot, bogey, flattie, woodentop; archaic peeler, runner, bluebottle, finger.
Duden Dictionary
Police
Po li ce Substantiv, feminin Versicherungswesen , die |poˈliːsə |die Police; Genitiv: der Police, Plural: die Policen französisch police < italienisch polizza < mittellateinisch apodixa < griechisch apódeixis = Nachweis 1 Urkunde über einen mit einer Versicherung abgeschlossenen Vertrag; Versicherungsschein 2 Versicherung, Versicherungsvertrag eine Police abschließen, kündigen
French Dictionary
policé
policé , ée adj. adjectif littéraire Civilisé. : Des manières policées. SYNONYME courtois ; raffiné . Note Orthographique poli c é.
police
police n. f. nom féminin 1 Administration chargée d ’assurer le respect des lois, le maintien de l ’ordre public. : Appelez la police, il y a un cambrioleur! 2 Acte qui constate un contrat d ’assurance. : Une police d ’assurance. LOCUTION Police de caractères. Famille de caractères typographiques. : La police de caractères Helvetica. SYNONYME fonte . FORMES FAUTIVES police montée. Calque de « mounted police » pour nommer la Gendarmerie royale du Canada. police. Impropriété au sens de policier. Note Orthographique poli c e.
policeman
policeman FORME FAUTIVE Anglicisme pour policier.
policer
policer v. tr. verbe transitif 1 littéraire Adoucir les mœurs de. : « Nous pourrions bientôt voir ce qu ’une société de production télévisuelle ferait si elle était autorisée à planifier, policer et gouverner une ville » (Courrier international ). 2 figuré Adoucir, humaniser. : La candidate à la présidence tente de policer son image et de rassurer, mais peine à cacher les changements profonds de gouvernance qu ’elle entend mener. SYNONYME civiliser . avancer Conjugaison Le c prend une cédille devant les lettres a et o. Il poliça, nous poliçons.
Spanish Dictionary
policéntrico, -ca
policéntrico, -ca adjetivo Que posee varios centros de dirección o decisión :pensamiento policéntrico; el auge de los mercadosemergentes está dando lugar a un mundo policéntrico en el que el crecimiento y lainnovación pueden provenir de cualquier lugar .
policentrismo
policentrismo nombre masculino Sistema que admite varios centros de dirección o de decisión .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
police
po lice /pəlíːs / (! 強勢は第2音節 ) 〖「都市国家 」>「治安維持; 警察 」〗(名 )policeman 名詞 U 1 〖複数扱い 〗警察官たち , 警官隊 (police force ); 〖通例the ~〗(組織としての )警察 ▸ The police [Police ] are faced with a challenging case .警察は難しい事件に直面している (!╳(The [A ]) police is …としない ) ▸ call (the ) police 警察を呼ぶ ▸ They were arrested by (the ) police .彼らは警察に逮捕された ▸ (the ) local police 地元の警察 ▸ (the ) riot [mounted ] police 機動隊 [騎馬警官隊 ]▸ (the ) military police 憲兵隊 (⦅略 ⦆M.P.)▸ (the ) security police 秘密警察 (secret police ); (スパイを取り締まる )公安警察 ; (空港などの )警備隊 ▸ many plain-clothes police 多くの私服警官たち (!1人の警官はa police officerなどとする ) 2 〖形容詞的に 〗警察の ▸ the police emergency number 警察の緊急電話番号 〘⦅米 ⦆では911, ⦅英 ⦆では999 〙▸ a police academy ⦅米 ⦆警察学校 動詞 他動詞 1 〈警察 軍隊が 〉〈地域 行事など 〉を警備する , 警戒する , 監視する ▸ a heavily policed society 厳しく監視されている社会 .2 〈委員会などが 〉〈特定の活動 産業 〉を監視する , 監督する .3 (きちんとしているか )〈場所 〉を見てまわる .~́ à ction (平和維持のための )治安 [軍事 ]活動 .~́ b ò x (日本の )派出所, 交番 ; ⦅英 ⦆警察用電話ボックス .~́ c à r パトロールカー (squad car ).~̀ c ó nstable ⦅英 ⦆巡査 (⦅略 ⦆P.C.).~́ c ò rdon 非常線 .~́ c ò urt 警察裁判所 〘軽犯罪を即決する 〙.~́ dep à rtment 市警察 ▸ the New York Police Department ニューヨーク市警 (⦅略 ⦆NYPD ).~́ d ò g 1 警察犬 .2 =German shepherd .~́ ò ffice [st à tion ]⦅英 ⦆(地域の )警察署 (⦅米 ⦆station house ).~́ ò fficer 警官 .~́ st à te 警察国家 〘秘密警察などにより政府が国民を支配する国 〙.~́ w à gon ⦅米 ⦆囚人護送車 (patrol [paddy ] wagon ).
policeman
po lice man /pəlíːsmən /→police 名詞 複 -men /-mən /C (男性の )警察官 , 巡査 (⦅男女共用 ⦆ police officer; ⦅女性形 ⦆ policewoman ) (!呼びかけはofficer ) .
policewoman
pol í ce w ò man 名詞 複 -women C 婦人警官 (⦅男女共用 ⦆police officer ).