posse: [17] Posse was the Latin verb for ‘be able’. It was a conflation of an earlier expression potis esse ‘be able’; and potis ‘able’ was descended from an Indo-European base *potthat also produced Sanskrit pati- ‘master, husband’ and Lithuanian patis ‘husband’. In medieval Latin posse came to be used as a noun meaning ‘power, force’.
It formed the basis of the expression posse comitātus, literally ‘force of the county’, denoting a body of men whom the sheriff of a county was empowered to raise for such purposes as suppressing a riot. The abbreviated form posse emerged at the end of the 17th century, but really came into its own in 18th- and 19th-century America. => possible, potent
posse (n.)
1640s (in Anglo-Latin from early 14c.), shortening of posse comitatus "the force of the county" (1620s, in Anglo-Latin from late 13c.), from Medieval Latin posse "body of men, power," from Latin posse "have power, be able" (see potent) + comitatus "of the county," genitive of Late Latin word for "court palace" (see comitatus). Modern slang meaning "small gang" is probably from Western movies.
雙語例句
1. a little posse of helpers
一小夥幫忙的人
來自《權威詞典》
2. A posse of Marsh's friends persuaded them that this was a bad idea.
馬什的一群朋友勸他們說這是個餿主意。
來自柯林斯例句
3. Those on today's posse got one drink coming from the county budget!
今天巡邏的人喝一杯縣裏出錢的酒.
來自電影對白
4. The sheriff said posse could head off the outlaws at the pass.
那位行政司法長官說,警察們可以在關口截住那些亡命之徒.
來自互聯網
5. Chen Zhankui battle song gallops sky, we are posse fire.