CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: NOUN
- A nonmilitary citizen
- Plural form of civilian.
- Those who are closely connected with a person as subjects, domestics, attendants, followers, etc.; also, one's family, relatives, etc.: as, a pastor and his people.
- Animals or other beings distinct from humans.
- A person's family, relatives, or ancestors.
- Persons subordinate to or loyal to a ruler, superior, or employer.
- Persons with regard to their residence, class, profession, or group.
- A body of persons sharing a common religion, culture, or language.
- The citizens of a political unit, such as a nation or state; the electorate. Used with the.
- A body of persons living in the same country under one national government; a nationality.
- The mass of ordinary persons; the populace. Used with the.
- Humans considered as a group or in indefinite numbers. Often treated as a plural of person, especially in compounds.
- The common people generally
- The body of citizens of a state or country
- Members of a family line
- (plural) any group of human beings (men or women or children) collectively
- The mass of persons inhabiting a place; subjects or citizens, as distinguished from their rulers or from men of rank or men of authority in any profession; the commonalty; the populace: usually preceded by the definite article: as, the king and the people; one of the people; the darling of the people.
- The mass of a community as distinguished from a special class (elite); the commonalty; the populace; the vulgar; the common crowd; the citizens.
- A person's ancestors, relatives or family.
- One's colleagues or employees.
- A group of persons regarded as being employees, followers, companions or subjects of a ruler.
- Persons forming or belonging to a particular group, such as a nation, class, ethnic group, country, family, etc; folk; community.
- Used as plural of person; a body of human beings considered generally or collectively; a group of two or more persons.
- One's subjects; fellow citizens; companions; followers.
- One's ancestors or family; kindred; relations.
- The mass of community as distinguished from a special class; the commonalty; the populace; the vulgar; the common crowd.
- Persons, generally; an indefinite number of men and women; folks; population, or part of population; ; -- sometimes used as an indefinite subject or verb, like on in French, and man in German.
- The body of persons who compose a community, tribe, nation, or race; an aggregate of individuals forming a whole; a community; a nation.
- Synonyms People, Nation, Race, Tribe, Clan. People stands for the ruled in distinction from the rulers, as king and people, or for the mass of the community, etc., without thought of any distinction between rulers and ruled. The word nation stands for a political body viewed as a whole. The unity may be ethnic, instead of political; this sense, however, is less common. Race is the most common word for all those who seem to make a whole in community of descent and are too numerous to be called a tribe, clan, or family: as, the Anglo-Saxon race is one branch of the Germanic, tracing its descent through certain Low German tribes. Tribe, apart from certain peculiar meanings, stands for a subdivision of a race: as, the twelve tribes of Israel; ordinarily the word is not applied to civilized persons; we speak of tribes of Indians, Arabs, Africans. Clan is used chiefly of the old organization of kinsmen among the Scotch Highlanders; where used of others, it expresses a similar organization, with intense loyalty and partizanship.
- A set or crowd; company.
- Human beings; men.
- The whole body of persons who compose a community, tribe, race, or nation: as, the people of England; the people of Israel.
- Persons; any persons indefinitely; men: a collective noun taking a verb in the plural, and admitting in colloquial use a numeral adjective: as, people may say what they please; a number of country people were there; people of fashion; there were not ten people present.
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: ADJECTIVE
- Associated with or performed by civilians as contrasted with the military
- N/A
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: VERB
- N/A
- Make one's home or live in
- Fill with people or supply with inhabitants
- To become populous or populated.
- To inhabit; to occupy; to populate.
- Furnish with people
- Fill with people
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To settle or inhabit with people; populate.
- To be present in or on (a place).
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To stock with people or inhabitants; populate.
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: RELATED WORDS
- Civic, Memorials, Civ, Commoners, Servants, Populations, Population, Civvies, Residents, Nationals, Citizens, Persons, People, Civil, Noncombatant
- Citizens, Persons, Individuals, Folks, Populate, Reside, Dwell, Shack, Multitude, Inhabit, Hoi polloi, Mass, Live, Citizenry, Masses
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Soldiers, Calendar, Civil law, Burgers, Civic, Civ, Commoners, Population, Civvies, Residents, Nationals, Citizens, People, Civil, Noncombatant
- Children, Others, Residents, Citizens, Folks, Populate, Reside, Dwell, Shack, Multitude, Hoi polloi, Mass, Live, Citizenry, Masses
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- They have orders to kill all remaining civilians.
- In the libertarian ideal, the state has no more firepower to control civilians than the civilians have to police themselves, or to fight back.
- As a result, the Revolutionary War included little direct attacks on civilians, but that does not mean that civilians did not suffer.
- This course is designed for Regular Army, Army Reserve, and National Guard Soldiers; sailors; marines; airmen; civilians; and contract civilians.
- Just as terrorism targets innocent civilians, so too are innocent civilians becoming casualties in the international campaign against terrorism.
- Some justified Soviet brutality towards German civilians based on previous brutality of German troops toward Russian civilians.
- ICC Statute against combatants while believing they are civilians could be treated as attempts to commit crimes against humanity against civilians.
- Because the weapon cannot distinguish between military targets and civilians, it invariably kills and wounds civilians when used in or near populated areas.
- International law countenanced, for example, the starvation of civilians or reprisals against civilians.
- Civilians Deploying civilians There are occasions when civilians deploy on operations with the ADF.
- Generally temporary housing for a particular group of people, such as homeless people, abused women, recovering addicts, etc.
- Where a number of people are voting, record how many people voted in favour of a change and how many people voted against.
- There are really no issues with people offering people tainted drinks, let along children.
- They people need to find a real legal job and stop scamming people.
- People love it when people take note of their good service here.
- Access for all people, including people with disabilities, to web environments.
- Younger people also tolerate symptoms of anemia better than elderly people.
- Mostly recognised by younger people and people from ethnic minorities.
- Women are going to continue to keep coming forward against people like Roy Moore, against people in media, against people in Hollywood.
- You walk the street, people are hugging, people are crying, people are clapping, horns are blaring.
CIVILIANS vs PEOPLE: QUESTIONS
- Could WikiLeaks endanger US troops and Iraqi civilians?
- Does the Philippines need military assistance to civilians?
- Do civilians have a bias against military veterans?
- How many Iraqi civilians were killed by Blackwater?
- Does Dag offer open enrollment courses for civilians?
- How will the sequestration furloughs affect DoD civilians?
- Did Islamic State decapitate seven civilians in Hawija?
- Can civilians exercise supremacy in military policy?
- Is information technology being weaponized against civilians?
- Are civilians civilians considered lawful combatants?
- Why are some people so talkative and some people not?
- What do intelligent people do that other people don't?
- Do people who look down on other people end up being looked up?
- How many people care for people in the UK each year?
- Do religious people give more to charity than secular people?
- Why do people think highly intelligent people are super humans?
- Do blind people dream differently from other people?
- Why are people prejudiced against people with disabilities?
- How do sarcastic people affect the people around them?
- Why do people think emotional people have mood swings?