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  1. Mar 6, 2016 · As TFD explains: en garde (interj.) Used to warn a fencer to assume the position preparatory to a match. [French : en, on + garde, guard.] Interestingly enough, on guard can also be found in dictionaries, but it means something a little different. The very useful OneLook page also lists entries for en garde. Share.

  2. Apr 18, 2013 · BrE guard = AmE conductor. a railway train crew member responsible for operational and safety duties that do not involve actual operation of the train. (another AmE definition, from the Railroad Jobs Guide) Railroad conductors examine schedules, switching orders, bill of ladings, and shipping records.

  3. Feb 15, 2018 · A guard is supposed to guard. Guards used to guard. Are these two sentences correct? Is it necessary that we place the word 'security' before the word 'guard' when it is already mentioned in the text that we are talking about protection and security? Can we use a word that is a verb as well as a noun in one sentence?

  4. Dec 7, 2019 · 1. In any conflict, fighters' guards are the weapons and shields used for attack and defence. Where people are concerned, such weapons are traditionally spears, swords and daggers for attack and shields and armour for defence. An attacker who, for instance, was able to stab a defender's legs beneath the shield, got under the defender's guard.

  5. May 7, 2020 · So, the response from the guard, drawing a distinction between the two, is a kind of snide reply—inferring one sense of can to the person asking the question, rather than what would normally be assumed. No doubt the guard actually knew what the person was asking and just wanted to put them down subtly.

  6. "The guard condition evaluates to false." That's the more correct phrasing in the two choices given; and the grammar explanation has already been provided. But I want to mention that the word choices here enter into fine points of programming semantics. A guard condition is controlled by an expression to be evaluated.

  7. Aug 10, 2023 · We logically assume that in #1 it's the fact of the guard being dropped which enables backstabbing, but in #2 it's the guard itself which (until dropped) is there to prevent backstabbing. 1 On closer inspection, #3 and #4 are imho syntactically invalid (or at least, seriously non-idiomatic).

  8. Guard what? "the happiness" or "the quality of your thoughts"? Guard your thoughts because the happiness of your life depends on it. Is nature reasonable???? In this context, it just means that you should maintain good thoughts. "Take care that you entertain no notions" = "Take care that you don't entertain notions"? Yes

  9. Dec 9, 2019 · The final photo example of a stone wall on top of a structure would be either a parapet, or just a wall (possibly guard wall). In old castles, the guard wall may also be referred to as the ramparts, but that may also include the rest of the structure too, not just the wall. Anything else is really a barrier.

  10. Jan 10, 2023 · Job titles (which are often just descriptions of a person's job anyway) are only normally capitalised within the confines of an employing organisation and only when referring to the post itself rather than the person occupying it. Even then, it is a stylistic choice and not a 'rule' of English. For example: I work as a security guard. We have ...