Policeman in a sentence as a noun

"A policeman's job is only easy in a police state.

Or being read by your employer, local 23 year old policeman, or nosey neighbour?I could go on and on.

When the policeman arrived that night to take our statement it was clear he'd had a long day for whatever reason.

" "Now you're starting again," said the policeman, dipping a piece of buttered bread in the honeypot.

Are you saying: who's worse, the criminals pick pocketing people or the policeman that fails to catch the criminal?

If a policeman has access to body armor and machine guns to serve a warrant on some guy in a house, he will take them along.

There must be a case where a single policeman had to fire a gun based on his own judgement but I don't remember reading about one.

The policeman has to prove the crime, because proving that the person has been inconsistent is such and such answers won't lead anywhere.

"One of the many problems with allowing this sort of procedure is that it shapes who signs up to be a policeman, and who quits the police force.

I read that this started saturday as a protest against a policeman who shot someone, but that doesn't seem to be what the protests is about now.

He chose to become a policeman, knowing the risks; innocent people terrorized and murdered by the police never had that luxury.

Doctors then gave Eckert an enema and forced him to have a bowel movement in the presence of a nurse and policeman, according to a lawsuit that Eckert filed.

About two or three years ago I was taken aside when boarding a plane at a London airport back to Belfast by a policeman and held under their terrorism legislation.

No, the logic goes like this: in "country X", this type of arrogant behavior is supported by the political background, while in "Sweden", there's no polical support for policeman rudeness.

> So, if something bad happens to you in Sweden, say a policeman is rude to you, or something like that, will you leave Sweden because of it ?No. But if police officers are routinely rude to me, and if I see many reports of officers killing people and beating people - even people who pose no risk to those officers - then I might start thinking about where I live.

> It also gives you deniability: If a judge or policeman orders you to hand over your password, you can plausibly say that you dont actually know itThe UK law requires that you make the encrypted data intelligible.

While I support the overall idea, the name "Pepper the Pigs" is going to be very confusing in the USA- 'pigs' is a slang term for a policeman, so my immediate association was that you want to pepperspray police officers.

Policeman definitions

noun

a member of a police force; "it was an accident, officer"

See also: officer