guard (verb)

  • 71ship out — verb a) To depart, especially for a sea voyage or military assignment. The brigade is scheduled to ship out for final training in Okinawa by mid November. b) To leave, get out, or …

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  • 72watch over — verb To guard and protect. She stayed up all night to watch over the sick infant …

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  • 73save vs. — verb In certain games, to successfully guard against a particular danger …

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  • 74underbear — verb a) To support, endure. cloth of gold underborne with blue tinsel ― Shakespeare. b) To line, guard or face a material, especially cloth …

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  • 75smash the stack — verb To corrupt the call stack, causing execution to jump to a random address, sometimes used as a malicious attack on a system. Theres something interesting about this approach mdash; we havent smashed the stack, so some mechanisms that might… …

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  • 76defend — verb /dɛˈfɛnd,dɛˈfɛnd,diˈfɛnd,dəˈfɛnd/ a) To ward off attacks from; to fight to protect; to guard. The vertue is, that neither steele, nor stone / The stroke thereof from entrance may defend [...]. b) To support by words or writing; to vindicate …

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  • 77double-team — verb a) In sports involving offensive and defensive teams, to use two defensive players to guard against the movements of a single offensive player. On any given night, Pivotman Macauley was good for at least 18 points a game. But because L.I.U.… …

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  • 78buy time — verb Purposefully cause a delay to something, in order to achieve something else. We need you to buy us some time, so distract the security guard for a few minutes …

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  • 79walk the beat — verb To patrol on the job, especially as an officer or guard …

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  • 80keep watch — verb To guard; to watch over someone or something. In the afternoon the sun shone hot in their faces, for there were no trees to offer them shade; so that before night Dorothy and Toto and the Lion were tired, and lay down upon the grass and fell …

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