constable

listen to the pronunciation of constable
الإنجليزية - التركية
i., İng. polis, polis memuru
polis memuru

Polis memuru genci hırsızlık için tutukladı. - The police constable arrested the teenager for shoplifting.

sakçı memuru
(isim) polis memuru [brit.]
görevli/polis memur
special constable geçici polis memuru
Chief Constable bir vilâyetin polis müdürü
{i} polis memuru [brit.]
yüksek memur
polis memuru brit
Chief Constable
emniyet müdürü
high constable
Emniyet müdürü
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
A police officer ranking below sergeant in most British police forces. (See also Chief Constable)
Officer of a noble court in the middle ages, usually a senior army commander. (See also marshal)
A elected head of a parish (also known as a connétable)
Public officer, usually at municipal level, responsible for maintaining order or serving writs and court orders
an officer whose duty is to maintain the peace
{n} in Eu. a governor or commander, in Am. a town officer of the peace, with the powers of an under sheriff
{i} officer of the peace; police officer (British)
an official who is responsible for keeping the peace and seeing that lawsare obeyed
a lawman with less authority and jurisdiction than a sheriff
In Britain and some other countries, a constable is a police officer of the lowest rank. He was a constable at Sutton police station. Constable Stuart Clark Thanks for your help, Constable. see also Chief Constable
[See "Sheriff", in some jurisdictions
A law enforcement officer having minor police and judicial functions
A peace officer assigned as the bailiff to a court
a lawman with less authority and jurisdiction than a sheriff a police officer of the lowest rank English landscape painter (1776-1837)
a police officer of the lowest rank
An officer of the peace having power as a conservator of the public peace, and bound to execute the warrants of judicial officers
The officer in charge of keeping order at an event The exact role varies among the Kingdoms -- may include directing parking, collecting waivers and site fees, dealing with fires and other emergencies, and seeing that blatantly mundane artifacts are kept out of sight When on duty, Constables usually wear a blue baldric with a gold mace on it In some Kingdoms, the word is also used for people who are helping to oversee the conduct of combat on the field (See Marshal (6), Officer )
A high officer in the monarchical establishments of the Middle Ages
In the United States, a constable is an official who helps keep the peace in a town. They are lower in rank than a sheriff
Officer primarily responsible for processing services and performing minor legal duties in Justice of the Peace Courts
An old position originally responsible to the Manor Court Leet The parish constable, otherwise known as Petty Constable, would enforce various orders from the Church Wardens and Overseers of the Poor He would be responsible for all sorts of tasks, ale houses, beggars, bastardy payments, church and poor rate collection, maintenance of pillories and stocks and the village lock up He was unpaid but allowed expenses, my g g grandfather's journal shows that his expenses included a horse provided by the parish!
– The chief officer of the household, court, administration, or military forces of a ruler
English landscape painter (1776-1837)
chief constable
The chief of police of most territorial UK police forces, except the Metropolitan Police and City of London Police
special constable
A volunteer police officer
high constable
A constable having certain duties and powers within a hundred
Chief Constable
A Chief Constable is the officer who is in charge of the police force in a particular county or area in Britain. a police officer in charge of the police in a large area of Britain
John Constable
a British painter famous for his paintings and drawings of the Suffolk countryside, especially 'The Haywain' (1776-1837). born June 11, 1776, East Bergholt, Suffolk, Eng. died March 31, 1837, London British painter. The artist's father was a wealthy man who owned mills at Flatford and Dedham, on the Suffolk and Essex banks of the Stour, respectively. Constable began his career in 1799 after entering the Royal Academy Schools in London. In the years 1809 to 1816 he established his mastery and evolved his individual manner, concentrating on the scenes that had delighted him as a boy: the village lanes, the fields and meadows running down to the Stour, barges drawn by tow horses, and the vessels passing the locks at Flatford or Dedham. In 1813-14 he filled two sketchbooks, which survive intact, with over 200 landscape drawings. After about 1816 Constable began to embody his concept of the Suffolk countryside in a series of canvases monumental enough to make an impression in exhibitions of the Royal Academy; his best-known work from this period is The Hay-Wain (1821). These works reveal Constable's detailed study of the formation of clouds, the colour of meadows and trees, and the effect of light glistening on leaves and water. Especially later in his career, he was considered a master of watercolour as well as oil painting on canvas. He is ranked with J.M.W. Turner as one of the greatest 19th-century British landscape painters
chief constable
chief of police (Britain)
chief constable
the head of the police force in a county (or similar area)
constables
plural of constable
police constable
A police constable is a policeman or policewoman of the lowest rank. A police constable is handling all inquiries. Police Constable David Casey. PC a police officer of the lowest rank
special constable
someone in Britain who sometimes works as a police officer without being paid, and who also has another main job
constable

    الواصلة

    con·sta·ble

    التركية النطق

    känstıbıl

    النطق

    /ˈkänstəbəl/ /ˈkɑːnstəbəl/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'kän(t)-st&-b&l, ] (noun.) 13th century. Old French conestable ( > French connétable), from Latin comes stabulī (“officer of the stables”). For the sense-development, compare marshall.
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