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Simply a french policeman? A policeman? Police? Cop?

2007-08-08 11:42:19 · 19 answers · asked by xCasie 1 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

19 answers

somehow
gendarme comes to mind
john-darm

2007-08-08 11:44:22 · answer #1 · answered by Sufi 7 · 0 0

Gendarme

2007-08-12 10:31:01 · answer #2 · answered by imjarsmom 2 · 0 0

Gendarme

2007-08-09 00:46:57 · answer #3 · answered by WC 7 · 0 0

Coppers, or law enforcement officers, comes from the copper buttons on early English police uniforms. The "present day" English police have been prepared, or based, by using Sir Robert Peel in the nineteenth century. it is the place English policemen even have been given the nickname Bobbys. The copper buttons of course being distinctive and of course recognizable to the offender aspects of the time.

2016-10-09 15:02:18 · answer #4 · answered by mundhenk 3 · 0 0

Gendarmerie

2007-08-08 11:46:48 · answer #5 · answered by iastate_cy 1 · 0 0

policier is the proper term for a police-man.

Gendarmerie also used

flic means cop.

thank you madame for the highschool french. haha

2007-08-08 11:46:25 · answer #6 · answered by dolcebella4 2 · 2 0

It's been a while since I took French...isn't it something like a gendarmme?

2007-08-08 11:44:29 · answer #7 · answered by CG 6 · 0 0

the French call their police gendarmes, which came from gens d'arme (people with weaponry)

2007-08-08 11:46:50 · answer #8 · answered by arvi 2 · 0 0

I think it's Zandarm and police is La Zandarmerie...

2007-08-08 11:46:57 · answer #9 · answered by russianblue 20 2 · 0 0

policier=police officer

Gendarmerie=military police

flic= cop.

2007-08-08 12:18:17 · answer #10 · answered by Kevy 7 · 0 0

Le cheese eating cowardly smelly little pig ?

2007-08-08 12:44:52 · answer #11 · answered by rico3151 6 · 0 0

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