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patrolman
/ pəˈtrəʊlmən /
noun
- a man, esp a policeman, who patrols a certain area
- a man employed to patrol an area to help motorists in difficulty
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Gender Note
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Word History and Origins
Origin of patrolman1
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Example Sentences
Then, in January 2020, prosecutors allege Murdaugh relied on “his prestige and reputation as a lawyer” to convince a highway patrolman who was injured in the line of duty to sign over his insurance check to his former law firm.
His alleged victims include a highway patrolman who was injured while on duty, documents state.
Wersick asked Officer Mark Gribble as the patrolman wrestled him down to the sidewalk.
Gobert is so valuable as a paint patrolman that the Jazz do their best to keep him as close to the basket as possible, as often as possible.
As Lanny Johnson, a former ski patroller, says, “There’s nowhere in the world where you can work as a ski patrolman related to avalanche hazard that’s any more dangerous than Alpine Meadows.”
The officer who shot Myers was identified as Jason Flanery, a 32-year-old white patrolman.
Well, the kid sued, the papers got it, and soon the chief wanted to see Patrolman France—privately.
See, a hippie came through town, so Patrolman France arrested him.
“I shot him,” Michele Wanko, 42, reportedly told Parkside Police Patrolman Brian McNeill Jr.
There was no time now to seek out the patrolman on the post; the job must be all his.
The eye of one man, punched out by a patrolman's club, hung on his cheek.
He summoned a patrolman to guide them to the wireless rooms and wished the boys success.
One young girl's fall was broken by a policeman's brawny arms—no other than Patrolman Chandler.
This was the girl Patrolman Chandler caught in his arms, who laughed and then fainted away.
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