'A stablekeeper.'的English词汇
与"A stablekeeper."最接近的候选词会按词典定义中的语义匹配度排序。
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- someone employed in a stable to take care of the horses
- A person who looks after horses.
- a man who has recently been married
- a man participant in his own marriage ceremony
- One of several officers of the English royal household, chiefly in the lord chamberlain's department.
- A brushing or cleaning, as of a dog or horse.
- A man who is about to marry.
- give a neat appearance to
- care for one's external appearance
- educate for a future role or function
- (transitive) To prepare (someone) for election or appointment.
- (transitive, law) To gain, or attempt to gain, the trust of a child or vulnerable person in order to take advantage of or exploit them, especially sexually (if under the age of consent).
- (transitive) To prepare (someone) for an event
- (transitive) To prepare (a ski slope) for skiers by packing down the snow.
- (transitive, software engineering) In agile software development, to review and prioritize the items in the development backlog.
- (transitive) To care for (horses or other animals) by brushing and cleaning them.
- To attend to one's appearance and clothing.
- One who gatekeeps.
- A person who guards or monitors passage through a gate.
- (computing) A provider of core platform services with specific characteristics (Regulation (EU) 2022/1925 of the European Parliament and of the Council)
- A common orange and brown butterfly with eyespots, Pyronia tithonus, of the family Nymphalidae.
- (psychology) In dissociative identity disorder, an aspect of the personality that controls access to the various identities.
- A person or group who controls access to something or somebody.
- someone who controls access to something
- someone who guards an entrance
- the keeper of a public house
- (Ancient Rome, historical) A tax collector, especially one working in Judea and Galilee during New Testament times (1st century C.E.) who was generally regarded as sinful for extorting more tax than was due, and as a traitor for serving the Roman Empire.
- (chiefly UK, Ireland) The landlord (manager or owner) of a public house (“a bar or tavern, often also selling food and sometimes lodging; a pub”).
- (Commonwealth, by extension) The manager or owner of a hotel.
- (by extension) To limit another party's participation in a collective identity or an activity, usually due to undue pettiness, resentment, or overprotectiveness.
- To control or limit access to something.
- (sociology) To limit (sometimes manipulatively, rather than directly) how much of a role another party, often a spouse, has in some task.
- a hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback
- someone who delivers punches
- a tool for making holes or indentations
- (often in combination) A person who punches (in a specified manner).
- (US, slang) A cowpuncher; a cowboy.
- A device for punching something, such as tickets.
- A person who keys data into a computer system.
- An officer responsible for the care and supervision of the horses of a person of rank.
- (British) A personal attendant to a head of state, a member of a royal family, or a national representative.
- a personal attendant of the British royal family
- an official charged with the care of the horses of princes or nobles
- One who minds, tends, or watches something such as a child, a machine, or cattle; a keeper.
- A monitor assigned by the authorities to someone, such as a foreign visitor (to exercise control over their contacts with the populace) or a journalist or someone who is speaking to journalists (to monitor and control what they say).
- (British) A personal bodyguard.
- a person who looks after babies (usually in the person's own home) while the babies' parents are working
- someone (usually in totalitarian countries) who is assigned to watch over foreign visitors
- a male hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback
- someone who is reckless or irresponsible (especially in driving vehicles)
- a male performer who gives exhibitions of riding and roping and bulldogging
- A man who identifies with cowboy culture, including wearing a cowboy hat and being a fan of country and western music.
- (uncountable) Ellipsis of cowboy pool.
- (informal) A person who engages in reckless behavior, especially for the purpose of showing off.
- A man who tends free-range cattle, especially in the American West.
- (card games, slang) A playing card of king rank.
- (British, New Zealand, informal) A dishonest or incompetent independent tradesman.
- (historical) A steward: the manager of a medieval manor charged with collecting its rents, etc.
- (historical, Norman term) A reeve, (specifically) the chief officer executing the decisions of any English court in the period following the Norman Conquest or executing the decisions of lower courts in the late medieval and early modern period.
- (historical) An overseer: a supervisor of tenant farmers, serfs, or slaves, usually as part of his role as steward (see above).
- (US) Any law enforcement officer charged with courtroom security and order.
- (UK) A bound bailiff: a deputy bailiff charged with debt collection.
- (UK) A high bailiff: an officer of the county courts responsible for executing warrants and court orders, appointed by the judge and removable by the Lord Chancellor.
- The High Bailiff of the Isle of Man.
- (historical, mining) The foreman or overman of a mine.
- (historical) An appointee of the French king administering certain districts of northern France in the Middle Ages.
- (historical) A head of a district ("bailiwick") of the Knights Hospitaller; a head of one of the national associations ("tongues") of the Hospitallers' headquarters on Rhodes or Malta.
- The chief justice and president of the legislature on Jersey and Guernsey in the Channel Islands.
- (UK, slang) Any debt collector, regardless of his or her official status.
- A huissier de justice or other foreign officer of the court acting as either a process server or as courtroom security.
- The title of the mayor of certain English towns.
- (historical) A landvogt in the medieval German states.
- The title of the castellan of certain royal castles in England.
- (historical) Synonym of hundredman: The chief officer of a hundred in medieval England.
- an officer of the court who is employed to execute writs and processes and make arrests etc.
- One who straps horses; now, specifically, someone employed to attend and groom racehorses.
- A large, strong, robust person (usually a man).
- (electronics) A wire that joins two light switches so that a light can be turned off or on from either switch.
- A person who works with straps, as on leather goods.
- a large and strong and heavyset man
- The warden of a castle.
- (historical) An officer of a noble court in the Middle Ages, usually a senior army commander. (See also marshal).
- (UK, law) A police officer or an officer with equivalent powers.
- (US) An elected or appointed public officer, usually at municipal level, responsible for maintaining order or serving writs and court orders.
- A large butterfly, Dichorragia nesimachus, family Nymphalidae, of Asia.
- (Channel Islands) An elected head of a parish (also known as a connétable)
- One holding the lowest rank in most Commonwealth police forces. (See also chief constable.)
- a police officer of the lowest rank
- a lawman with less authority and jurisdiction than a sheriff
- (historical) In the Middle Ages, an officer of the stables who had the care of measuring out the provender; an avenor.
- A means of defense formed by felled trees, or sometimes by bent trees, the ends of whose branches are sharpened and directed outwards, or against the enemy, and more recently fortified with barbed wire.
- In coal-mining, walls of cord-wood piled up crosswise to keep the underground roads open so as to secure ventilation.
- a line of defense consisting of a barrier of felled or live trees with branches (sharpened or with barbed wire entwined) pointed toward the enemy
- A sentry, watch, or guard.
- (computer science) A unique value recognised by a computer program for processing in a special way, or marking the end of a set of data.
- (attributive, medicine, epidemiology) A sign of a health risk (e.g. a disease, an adverse effect).
- A sentinel crab.
- a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event
- a guard who keeps watch
- a close observer; someone who looks at something (such as an exhibition of some kind)
- a person who keeps a devotional vigil by a sick bed or by a dead body
- (chiefly historical, Judaism, Christianity) A kind of angel appointed to watch over the human realm, in particular one of those who became fallen angels and begot the Nephilim.
- (chiefly as the final element in compounds) Someone who observes something closely for professional reasons, such as an analyst or pundit.
- A guard.
- (US politics) A political representative aligned with a candidate sent to observe elections to report on irregularities. A scrutineer.
- Someone who keeps vigil.
- a custodian who is hired to take care of something (property or a person)
- an official who performs the duties of an office temporarily
- (uncommon) Synonym of caregiver (“a person who provides care to another”).
- Someone who takes care of a place or thing; someone looking after a place, or responsible for keeping it in good repair.
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- someone employed in a stable to take care of the horses
- A person who looks after horses.
- a man who has recently been married
- a man participant in his own marriage ceremony
- One of several officers of the English royal household, chiefly in the lord chamberlain's department.
- A brushing or cleaning, as of a dog or horse.
- A man who is about to marry.
- give a neat appearance to
- care for one's external appearance
- educate for a future role or function
- (transitive) To prepare (someone) for election or appointment.
- (transitive, law) To gain, or attempt to gain, the trust of a child or vulnerable person in order to take advantage of or exploit them, especially sexually (if under the age of consent).
- (transitive) To prepare (someone) for an event
- (transitive) To prepare (a ski slope) for skiers by packing down the snow.
- (transitive, software engineering) In agile software development, to review and prioritize the items in the development backlog.
- (transitive) To care for (horses or other animals) by brushing and cleaning them.
- To attend to one's appearance and clothing.
- One who gatekeeps.
- A person who guards or monitors passage through a gate.
- (computing) A provider of core platform services with specific characteristics (Regulation (EU) 2022/1925 of the European Parliament and of the Council)
- A common orange and brown butterfly with eyespots, Pyronia tithonus, of the family Nymphalidae.
- (psychology) In dissociative identity disorder, an aspect of the personality that controls access to the various identities.
- A person or group who controls access to something or somebody.
- someone who controls access to something
- someone who guards an entrance
- the keeper of a public house
- (Ancient Rome, historical) A tax collector, especially one working in Judea and Galilee during New Testament times (1st century C.E.) who was generally regarded as sinful for extorting more tax than was due, and as a traitor for serving the Roman Empire.
- (chiefly UK, Ireland) The landlord (manager or owner) of a public house (“a bar or tavern, often also selling food and sometimes lodging; a pub”).
- (Commonwealth, by extension) The manager or owner of a hotel.
- (by extension) To limit another party's participation in a collective identity or an activity, usually due to undue pettiness, resentment, or overprotectiveness.
- To control or limit access to something.
- (sociology) To limit (sometimes manipulatively, rather than directly) how much of a role another party, often a spouse, has in some task.
- a hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback
- someone who delivers punches
- a tool for making holes or indentations
- (often in combination) A person who punches (in a specified manner).
- (US, slang) A cowpuncher; a cowboy.
- A device for punching something, such as tickets.
- A person who keys data into a computer system.
- An officer responsible for the care and supervision of the horses of a person of rank.
- (British) A personal attendant to a head of state, a member of a royal family, or a national representative.
- a personal attendant of the British royal family
- an official charged with the care of the horses of princes or nobles
- One who minds, tends, or watches something such as a child, a machine, or cattle; a keeper.
- A monitor assigned by the authorities to someone, such as a foreign visitor (to exercise control over their contacts with the populace) or a journalist or someone who is speaking to journalists (to monitor and control what they say).
- (British) A personal bodyguard.
- a person who looks after babies (usually in the person's own home) while the babies' parents are working
- someone (usually in totalitarian countries) who is assigned to watch over foreign visitors
- a male hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback
- someone who is reckless or irresponsible (especially in driving vehicles)
- a male performer who gives exhibitions of riding and roping and bulldogging
- A man who identifies with cowboy culture, including wearing a cowboy hat and being a fan of country and western music.
- (uncountable) Ellipsis of cowboy pool.
- (informal) A person who engages in reckless behavior, especially for the purpose of showing off.
- A man who tends free-range cattle, especially in the American West.
- (card games, slang) A playing card of king rank.
- (British, New Zealand, informal) A dishonest or incompetent independent tradesman.
- (historical) A steward: the manager of a medieval manor charged with collecting its rents, etc.
- (historical, Norman term) A reeve, (specifically) the chief officer executing the decisions of any English court in the period following the Norman Conquest or executing the decisions of lower courts in the late medieval and early modern period.
- (historical) An overseer: a supervisor of tenant farmers, serfs, or slaves, usually as part of his role as steward (see above).
- (US) Any law enforcement officer charged with courtroom security and order.
- (UK) A bound bailiff: a deputy bailiff charged with debt collection.
- (UK) A high bailiff: an officer of the county courts responsible for executing warrants and court orders, appointed by the judge and removable by the Lord Chancellor.
- The High Bailiff of the Isle of Man.
- (historical, mining) The foreman or overman of a mine.
- (historical) An appointee of the French king administering certain districts of northern France in the Middle Ages.
- (historical) A head of a district ("bailiwick") of the Knights Hospitaller; a head of one of the national associations ("tongues") of the Hospitallers' headquarters on Rhodes or Malta.
- The chief justice and president of the legislature on Jersey and Guernsey in the Channel Islands.
- (UK, slang) Any debt collector, regardless of his or her official status.
- A huissier de justice or other foreign officer of the court acting as either a process server or as courtroom security.
- The title of the mayor of certain English towns.
- (historical) A landvogt in the medieval German states.
- The title of the castellan of certain royal castles in England.
- (historical) Synonym of hundredman: The chief officer of a hundred in medieval England.
- an officer of the court who is employed to execute writs and processes and make arrests etc.
- One who straps horses; now, specifically, someone employed to attend and groom racehorses.
- A large, strong, robust person (usually a man).
- (electronics) A wire that joins two light switches so that a light can be turned off or on from either switch.
- A person who works with straps, as on leather goods.
- a large and strong and heavyset man
- The warden of a castle.
- (historical) An officer of a noble court in the Middle Ages, usually a senior army commander. (See also marshal).
- (UK, law) A police officer or an officer with equivalent powers.
- (US) An elected or appointed public officer, usually at municipal level, responsible for maintaining order or serving writs and court orders.
- A large butterfly, Dichorragia nesimachus, family Nymphalidae, of Asia.
- (Channel Islands) An elected head of a parish (also known as a connétable)
- One holding the lowest rank in most Commonwealth police forces. (See also chief constable.)
- a police officer of the lowest rank
- a lawman with less authority and jurisdiction than a sheriff
- (historical) In the Middle Ages, an officer of the stables who had the care of measuring out the provender; an avenor.
- A means of defense formed by felled trees, or sometimes by bent trees, the ends of whose branches are sharpened and directed outwards, or against the enemy, and more recently fortified with barbed wire.
- In coal-mining, walls of cord-wood piled up crosswise to keep the underground roads open so as to secure ventilation.
- a line of defense consisting of a barrier of felled or live trees with branches (sharpened or with barbed wire entwined) pointed toward the enemy
- A sentry, watch, or guard.
- (computer science) A unique value recognised by a computer program for processing in a special way, or marking the end of a set of data.
- (attributive, medicine, epidemiology) A sign of a health risk (e.g. a disease, an adverse effect).
- A sentinel crab.
- a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event
- a guard who keeps watch
- a close observer; someone who looks at something (such as an exhibition of some kind)
- a person who keeps a devotional vigil by a sick bed or by a dead body
- (chiefly historical, Judaism, Christianity) A kind of angel appointed to watch over the human realm, in particular one of those who became fallen angels and begot the Nephilim.
- (chiefly as the final element in compounds) Someone who observes something closely for professional reasons, such as an analyst or pundit.
- A guard.
- (US politics) A political representative aligned with a candidate sent to observe elections to report on irregularities. A scrutineer.
- Someone who keeps vigil.
- a custodian who is hired to take care of something (property or a person)
- an official who performs the duties of an office temporarily
- (uncommon) Synonym of caregiver (“a person who provides care to another”).
- Someone who takes care of a place or thing; someone looking after a place, or responsible for keeping it in good repair.