Militia in a sentence as a noun

We could have hired a private militia and escaped to safety for 5% of what we paid the state department.

All accounts of his interrogation have him trying to bluff them away from the town by scaring them with the spectre of a mustered militia.

What can a "well regulated militia" do against smart bullets, M1 Abrams, Apache helicopters, etc?Thank goodness we are kept fat and happy.

"Well regulated militia" means a militia free of encumbrances such that it can be functional, not one with a lot of extra-legislative rules applied to it.

"Keep us safe": militia, pikemen, shamans, legions, samurai, knights, musketeers, standing armies, chemists, doctors & nurses, the military/industrial complex.

" I posit that it's better than not bonding at all, but if you really want to dismiss my friendships and suggest the only way to forge lifetime male bonding is to form an underground anarchist militia and make bombs out of soap, I'll take that under consideration.

This is logical if you think about it- if they wanted the militia to be regulated, they would have laid out the ways he militia should be regulated, or at least enumerated the power to regulate the militia, in the enumerated powers clause.

Associate opponents with unpopular titles such as 'kooks', 'right-wing', 'liberal', 'left-wing', 'terrorists', 'conspiracy buffs', 'radicals', 'militia', 'racists', 'religious fanatics', 'sexual deviates', and so forth.

Militia definitions

noun

civilians trained as soldiers but not part of the regular army

See also: reserves

noun

the entire body of physically fit civilians eligible by law for military service; "their troops were untrained militia"; "Congress shall have power to provide for calling forth the militia"--United States Constitution