| po·lice   (pə -lē s ) 
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               n. pl.   police 1.  (used with a pl. verb)a.  A body of government employees trained in methods of law enforcement and crime prevention and detection and authorized to maintain the peace, safety, and order of the community. b.  A body of persons with a similar organization and function: campus police. Also called  police force. 2.  Archaic   Regulation and control of the affairs of a community, especially with respect to maintenance of order, law, health, morals, safety, and other matters affecting the public welfare. 3.  Informal   A group that admonishes, cautions, or reminds: grammar police; fashion police. 4. a.  The cleaning of a military base or other military area: Police of the barracks must be completed before inspection. b.  The soldiers assigned to a specified maintenance duty. tr.v.  po·liced, po·lic·ing , po·lic·es 1.  To regulate, control, or keep in order with a law enforcement agency or other official group. 2. a.  To impose one's viewpoint or beliefs regarding, especially in an authoritarian way: policing others' comments by implementing speech codes. b.  To critique in a presumptuous or arrogant manner: policed the grammar of everyone who commented on the blog post. 3.  To make (a military area, for example) neat in appearance: policed the barracks. 
 [French, from Old French policie, civil organization, from Late Latin polītīa, from Latin, the State, from Greek polīteia, from polītēs, citizen, from polis, city; see  pelə-3 in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] 
 po·licea·ble adj. po·licer n. |