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posse
[pos-ee]
noun
a body or force armed with legal authority.
Slang., a group of friends or associates.
hanging out with your posse; a posse of drug dealers.
posse
/ ˈpɒsɪ /
noun
Also called: posse comitatus. the able-bodied men of a district assembled together and forming a group upon whom the sheriff may call for assistance in maintaining law and order
law possibility (esp in the phrase in posse )
slang, a Jamaican street gang in the US
informal, a group of friends or associates
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of posse1
Example Sentences
“There is a law on the books, confirmed by the Constitution, called ‘posse comitatus,’” Pritzker told reporters earlier this month.
Swift’s worldwide Eras tour continued, but she became a fixture at Chiefs games whenever possible, bringing along a posse of famous friends to hang with the Kelce family in their Arrowhead Stadium box seats.
But when Gaga and her posse arrive at their destination across town, the same young woman has beaten them there, and waits with a sharpie and a photo.
Since his posse won’t admit the truth, I will: It sucks.
“There is a law on the books, confirmed by the Constitution, called ‘posse comitatus,'” Pritzker said.
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