0 someone whose job is to make certain someone does not escape or to protect a place or another person -- охранник, часовой
1 a group of soldiers or police officers who are protecting a person or place -- охрана, стража, караул
2 someone who is in charge of a train -- проводник (в поезде)
3 something that covers or protects someone or something -- защитное или предохранительное устройство
a fire guard
4 to be responsible for protecting a place or a person -- охранять
5 to be kept in a place by a group of people who have weapons -- быть под стражей
6 to protect someone or something from being attacked or stolen -- сторожить, охранять
7 to watch someone and make certain that they do not escape from a place -- караулить
In turn, this forces old guards to adapt to new balances of power when they cannot suppress the new media.
All of these avenues of research will reveal the importance of guarding against simple equations between knowledge and colonial power.
Dentists have guarded their status as autonomous practitioners and rejected all attempts at regulation by the state.
Perhaps the mysterious will remain forever guarded by its own definition, but at least now some of its doors have keys.
According to this municipal budget, in 1882 the 40 regular night guards employed by the municipality earned 12 pesos per month.
The common atrioventricular junction may be guarded by a common valve or by separate right and left valvar orifices.
The automaton contains a total of n -variable guards annotating its nonaccepting nodes.
Even in the late middle ages, town councils would occasionally employ mercenaries as guards at their town gates on a temporary basis.
中文繁体
守衛, 衛兵,警衛, 看守,守衛…
More中文简体
守卫, 卫兵,警卫, 看守,守卫…
MoreEspañol
guardia, guarda, vigilar…
MorePortuguês
carcereiro, -a, guarda…
More日本語
警備員, 守衛, ~を守る…
MoreTürk dili
koruma, muhafız, nöbetçi…
MoreFrançais
garde [masculine], garde [feminine], surveillance [feminine]…
MoreCatalan
guàrdia, guarda, vigilar…
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