posse

Published: Jan. 2, 2024, 5 a.m.

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\n \n Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 2, 2024 is:\n \n

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\n posse • \\PAH-see\\  • noun
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A posse is a group of friends, or a group of people who are gathered together for a particular purpose. Posse also refers to a group of people who were gathered together by a sheriff in the past to help search for a criminal.

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// He and his posse met after school to catch the newly released sequel to their favorite movie.

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// A posse of photographers waited outside the restaurant when they heard that the actress was spotted inside.

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See the entry >

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\n Examples:
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\u201c\u2018Kill Bill\u2019 meets James Bond in the video, in which Swift fights against and with a posse of stars such as Selena Gomez, Cindy Crawford and Zendaya. Don\u2019t expect them to pop up in the movie but, on tour, Swift performed the No. 1 hit with a posse of fierce, hip-swiveling dancers who stepped into the stars\u2019 kicks.\u201d \u2014 Chris Hewitt, The Star Tribune (Minneapolis, Minnesota), 10 Oct. 2023

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\n Did you know?
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Posse started out in English as part of a term from common law, posse comitatus, which in Medieval Latin translates as \u201cpower or authority of the county.\u201d Posse comitatus referred to a group of citizens summoned by a reeve (a medieval official) or sheriff to preserve the public peace as allowed for by law. \u201cPreserving the public peace\u201d so often meant hunting down a supposed criminal that posse eventually came to refer to any group organized to make a search or embark on a mission, and today one may read about posses organized for search and rescue efforts. In even broader use it can refer to any group, period. Sometimes nowadays that group is a gang or a rock band but it can as easily be any group\u2014of politicians, models, architects, tourists, children, or what have you\u2014acting together for some shared purpose.

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