police action

警方行动警察行动警方的行动警务行动

police action 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a relatively localized military action undertaken by regular armed forces, without a formal declaration of war, against guerrillas, insurgents, or other forces held to be violating international peace and order.

police action 近义词

n. 名词 noun

intervention by law enforcement

police action 的近义词 3

更多police action例句

  1. The cameras are now standard issue in many jurisdictions across the country, seen as a way to provide more objective accounts of police actions and rely less on the recollections of officers or anyone else.
  2. He will hire outside counsel to present the cases, a change in policy designed to strengthen the public’s sense of independent accountability for police action.
  3. They speculate that some police actions against these favela gangs may be motivated not by a desire to arrest criminals but rather to clear them out so that militias can take over.
  4. It’s not clear whether SDPD is tracking these “low-visibility” police actions because that information is not publicly available.
  5. Police officials told the AP that they came out with guns blazing.
  6. Yves Albarello, MP of Seine-et-Marne, said the gunmen told police they were ready to “die as martyrs.”
  7. Smith attended both funerals as a cop and as the husband of Police Officer Moira Smith, who died on 9/11.
  8. But along with the cartoon funk is an all-too-real story of police brutality embodied by a horde of evil Pigs.
  9. “The Wizard of Watts is not just about police brutality,” he says.
  10. Let the thought of self pass in, and the beauty of great action is gone, like the bloom from a soiled flower.
  11. If Mac had been alone he would have made the post by sundown, for the Mounted Police rode picked horses, the best money could buy.
  12. He saw Gen. Braddock as he passed on to his defeat, and could give a succinct account of that sanguinary action.
  13. The wisdom of a scribe cometh by his time of leisure: and he that is less in action, shall receive wisdom.
  14. Words are often everywhere as the minute-hands of the soul, more important than even the hour-hands of action.