Bodyguard in a sentence as a noun

There was bodyguard training, how to defend from a knife attack, stuff like that.

Like his bodyguard said, he probably would've given them breakfast if they'd knocked on his door.

The bodyguard had a licensed shotgun, locked inside a safe.

Therefore I have a right to hire a _bodyguard_ to defend me. Therefore we have the right to elect a _sheriff_ to defend us.

But, assume you mean something like Mullen tries to escape and her bodyguard shoots him in the back.

Pretty ballsy even with a bodyguard, all it takes is one bad bank teller to hand off your name and/or address.

Putin calls his bodyguard Ivan first and tells him to open the window and throw himself off from the twentieth floor.

It would be analogous to your bodyguard constantly hiring hitmen to make attempts at your life.

Aura of danger and secrecy... Dragging with you a 6ft+ 270lb ex-Marine bodyguard _conspicuously_ in Palo Alto.

Therefore, neither do I have any right to hire a _bodyguard_ to beat and rob people....Therefore, neither does our _sheriff_ have any right to beat and rob people -- even if we voted for him to do so!

Is this an initiation of force, and if it is, what if you lack the size to prevent me from doing it?Lastly, if I walk down skid row with a private bodyguard and a wad of $100 bills, offering to buy people as slaves?

Bodyguard definitions

noun

someone who escorts and protects a prominent person

See also: escort

noun

a group of men who escort and protect some important person