different between bailiff vs bandog

bailiff

English

Etymology

From Middle English baillif, baylyf, from Anglo-Norman and Old French bailif (plural bailis), probably from reconstructed Vulgar Latin *b?iulivus (castellan), from Latin b?iulus (porter; steward), whence also bail. As a translation of foreign titles, semantic loan from French bailli, Scots bailie, Dutch baljuw, etc. Mostly replaced the role of native reeve. Doublet of bailo.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: b??-l?f, IPA(key): /?be?l?f/

Noun

bailiff (plural bailiffs)

  1. (law enforcement) An officer of the court, particularly:
    1. (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.
    2. (Britain) 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.
    3. (Britain) A bound bailiff: a deputy bailiff charged with debt collection.
    4. (US) Any law enforcement officer charged with courtroom security and order.
    5. A huissier de justice or other foreign officer of the court acting as either a process server or as courtroom security.
  2. A public administrator, particularly:
    1. (obsolete) A king's man: any officer nominated by the English Crown.
    2. (historical) The chief officer of a hundred in medieval England.
    3. The title of the mayor of certain English towns.
    4. The title of the castellan of certain royal castles in England.
    5. The chief justice and president of the legislature on Jersey and Guernsey in the Channel Islands.
    6. The High Bailiff of the Isle of Man.
    7. (obsolete) A bailie: an alderman in certain Scottish towns.
    8. (historical) An appointee of the French king administering certain districts of northern France in the Middle Ages.
    9. (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.
    10. (historical) A landvogt in the medieval German states.
  3. A private administrator, particularly
    1. (historical) A steward: the manager of a medieval manor charged with collecting its rents, etc.
    2. (historical) An overseer: a supervisor of tenant farmers, serfs, or slaves, usually as part of his role as steward (see above).
    3. (historical, mining) The foreman or overman of a mine.
  4. (Britain, slang) Any debt collector, regardless of his or her official status.

Usage notes

Although bailiff is the most common term in American English for the law-enforcement officers who provide security and maintain order in a courtroom, such officers are often formally known by other titles, which vary by jurisdiction.

Synonyms

  • (British law enforcement officer): high bailiff, high-bailiff; warrant officer, beadle (in role of executing warrants); catchpoll, bumbailiff (in role of arresting debtors); process server (in role of serving processes and summonses)
  • (mayor): High-bailiff, High Bailiff; see also mayor
  • (castellan): See castellan
  • (officer of the Channel Islands): bailly
  • (Scottish alderman): See bailie
  • (medieval French magistrate): consul (southern France); capitoul (Toulouse); jurat (Bordeaux)
  • (medieval German magistrate): See landvogt
  • (medieval administrator): See steward
  • (medieval overseer): See overseer

Hypernyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

See also

  • reeve (earlier form of office)

References

  • Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed. "bailiff, n." Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1885.

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bandog

English

Etymology

From band +? dog.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?band??/

Noun

bandog (plural bandogs)

  1. (now rare) A dog that has been tied up; a mastiff or other kind of guard dog.
    • 1837 Thomas Carlyle, The French Revolution: A History
      Patriots may smile; and, using him [ Jean-Paul Marat ] as bandog now to be muzzled, now to be let bark....
    • 1982, Lawrence Durrell, Constance, Faber & Faber 2004 (Avignon Quintet), p. 934:
      The guns on the fortress responded, but the small calibre made them sound as if they were yapping like bandogs while the bombers bayed and gave tongue like hounds in cry.
  2. (specifically) A type of large, ferocious dog, bred by crossing American pit bull terriers with Neapolitan mastiffs.
  3. (obsolete, slang, cant) A bailiff or prison guard.

Alternative forms

  • band-dog

Translations

Anagrams

  • Badong, Bogdan, dongba

bandog From the web:

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