officer / ˈɔ fə sər, ˈɒf ə- /

⭐基础词汇官员警官人员官员们

officer2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a person who holds a position of rank or authority in the army, navy, air force, or any similar organization, especially one who holds a commission.
  2. a member of a police department or a constable.
  3. a person licensed to take full or partial responsibility for the operation of a merchant ship or other large civilian ship; a master or mate.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to furnish with officers.
  2. to command or direct as an officer does.
  3. to direct, conduct, or manage.

officer 近义词

n. 名词 noun

person who has high position in

n. 名词 noun

person in law enforcement

更多officer例句

  1. Interim Assistant Police Chief Frank Sousa said the group was gone when officers arrived.
  2. Criminal prosecutions are intended to punish officers, to deter future criminal behavior.
  3. According to police reports, Gillum was found vomiting in the room too inebriated to speak with officers while another man was passed out.
  4. The Houston Police Officers’ Union blasted the department’s decision to fire the officers, claiming that they acted justly, The New York Times notes.
  5. Cheng says that Post-Quantum Group, which was founded in 2009, once struggled to get chief information security officers and chief information officers at major banks and corporations to take the threat of quantum computers seriously.
  6. “Barbarism,” said retired NYPD Officer Jim Smith on Thursday.
  7. In the first episode, an officer is shown video of himself shooting and killing a man.
  8. That officer fretting about his “stance,” we learn, is plagued by PTSD that cripples him both on the job and at home.
  9. Smith attended both funerals as a cop and as the husband of Police Officer Moira Smith, who died on 9/11.
  10. The al Qaeda-linked gunmen shot back, but only managed to injure one officer before they were taken out.
  11. But the cavalry officer melted imperceptibly out of her existence.
  12. The engineer officer charged with preparing the line of retreat reported that the one bridge across the Elster was not sufficient.
  13. That woman meant mischief, or she would never have dared to suggest that a British officer should throw in his lot with hers.
  14. My orders ought to have been taken before a single unwounded Officer or man was ferried back aboard ship.
  15. Malcolm reined up, and soon a British officer appeared round a bend in the road.