释义 |
coast-guard|ˈkəʊstgɑːd| A force employed to guard the coast. Also attrib. In Great Britain the Coast Guard was originally employed under the Customs department to prevent smuggling (hence called the Preventive Service); the force was in 1856 transferred to the Admiralty, to be used as a general police force for the coast, available also as a defensive force.
1833H. Martineau Loom & Lugger i. i. 7 So Nicholas is to be one of the Coast Guard. 1863H. Cox Instit. iii. viii. 722 The forces employed in the coast-guard and revenue cruisers. 1879G. Fennell in Cassell's Techn. Educ. IV. 186/2 There ought to be a constant inspection..entrusted to the coast-guard service, which we believe has but little of its old original work of looking after smugglers. Mod. The white-washed coast-guard station on the cliff. Hence ˈcoastguard-man (also coastguardsman), a member of the coast-guard.
1848Johns Week at Lizard 197 A coastguard-man who had..been a smuggler. 1870M. Bridgman R. Lynne II. xiv. 291 He looked like a coastguardsman. |