| 单词 | provost | 
| 释义 | provostn. A person who is set or placed over others; a superintendent, president, head, chief. Cf. prepositus n., prévôt n.  I.  In ecclesiastical and scholastic use.  1.   a.  The head or president of an ecclesiastical chapter or religious community; in conventual bodies (as monasteries, etc.) properly the official who ranks next after the abbot and acts as his deputy; = prior n.1 1   (now chiefly historical). Also: the chief dignitary of a cathedral or collegiate church; the head of the chapter in a cathedral (cf. dean n.1 4).In quot. c1480: the prioress of a community of nuns. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > monasticism > religious superior > prior > 			[noun]		 provostOE priorOE prévôt1483 prepositor1881 society > faith > church government > council > chapter > member of chapter > 			[noun]		 > head provostOE deanc1330 warden1429 decan1432 OE (Northumbrian)    Aldred Colophon (Durham Ritual) in  A. H. Thompson  & U. Lindelöf Rituale Ecclesiae Dunelmensis 		(1927)	 185  				Aldred se profast ðas feower collectæ on fif næht aldne mona ær underne awrat. OE    Old Eng. Martyrol. 		(Julius)	 20 Mar. 37  				Þa ondranc se þæs wætres ond sealde hit þæm breðer ðe him ætstod, ðæs mynstres profoste [OE Corpus Cambr. 196 þæt wæs þæs mynstres prauast]. lOE    Anglo-Saxon Chron. 		(Laud)	 		(Peterborough interpolation)	 anno 1066  				Ða cusen þa munecas to abbot Brand prouost. ?a1450    in  C. von Nolcken Middle Eng. Transl. Rosarium Theol. 		(1979)	 102 (MED)  				For þise & sich will þai be and ar prouestez of chirchez, denes, archidekenes, bischopis & archebischopis. c1480						 (a1400)						    St. Matthew 307 in  W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. 		(1896)	 I. 199  				Þar dowchtyre..of his hand þe vail scho [sc. Ephigenea] tuk..& wes mad proves but wene of twa hu[n]dricht virginis clene. a1525						 (c1448)						    R. Holland Bk. Howlat l. 688 in  W. A. Craigie Asloan MS 		(1925)	 II. 116  				Abbotis of ordouris Prowestis and priouris. a1552    J. Leland Itinerary 		(1711)	 VI. 1  				Wyngham..Ther is a Provoste,  vi. Prebendaries, besydes othar Ministers of the Churche. 1561    in  J. H. Burton Reg. Privy Council Scotl. 		(1877)	 1st Ser. I. 194  				All Denis, Archdenis, Subdenis, Chantouris, Subchantouris, Provestis, Personis, Vicaris. 1641    Sc. Acts Chas. I 		(1817)	 V. 520/1  				Ane dissolutione made be the proveist and first prebendar of the Colledge kirk of Corstorphine with advyse and consent of George Lord Forrester of Corstorphine vndoubted Patrone of the said Provesterie. 1688    R. Holme Acad. Armory  iii. 177/1  				(Benedictine Rules) That the Provost or Prepositus be chosen by the Abbot to whom he must be subject. 1714    J. Gillan Remarks upon Sir James Dalrymple’s Hist. Coll. ix. 132  				Adam Mackarwistun, Provost of the Church of St. Mary. 1744    T. Tanner  & J. Tanner Notitia Monastica 		(new ed.)	 111  				Upon the removal of the bishop's See hither by bishop Aldwin about the year 995..there seem to have been in this cathedral a provost, and Secular canons. 1824    G. Chalmers Caledonia III.  iii. viii. 307  				In place of the nunnery [of Linncluden], he established a collegiate church, consisting of a provost, and twelve canons. 1878    Clergy List 458  				The Episcopal Church in Scotland..United Diocese of Moray, Ross, and Caithness..Provost of the Cathedral [at Inverness] the Bishop. 1898    A. F. Leach Mem. Beverley Minster I. Introd. 40  				At York, Hugh the Chanter says, on Thomas rebuilding the Canons' Hall he..‘established a Provost [L. Præpositum constituit] to preside over them and provide for them’. 1907    Catholic Encycl. XII. 386/2  				Prelate... The real prelates include..(3) abbots and provosts of monasteries. 1960    J. Highet Sc. Churches 31  				The Provost of a Cathedral Church is ex officio a Canon of the Chapter, ranking next after the Dean. 1999    Church Times 17 Dec. 14/2  				The Provost..wants to balance the festivities with an emphasis on reflection. A watchnight service will take place in the cathedral ruins as the new millennium dawns. ΚΠ 1481    W. Caxton tr.  Siege & Conqueste Jerusalem 		(1893)	 clxx. 252  				On the cornes ben hye towres, vpon whiche the prouostes were woonte to goo vp at certayn howres for to warne and somone the peple to praye.  c.  A Protestant minister in charge of the principal church of a town or district in certain European countries, including Germany, the Low Countries, and Scandinavia.Usually a rendering of an equivalent word in those countries: see note in etymology. ΚΠ 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane Commentaries f. ccccxiiijv  				The fellowes or prebends of that Colledge [at Eluange = Elblag in Poland, formerly Elbing] haue authority to chuse the Prouost, as they commonly call him. 1780    tr.  U. von Troil Lett. on Iceland 173  				The provost and minister of Hiardarholt..is justly celebrated. 1796    J. Morse Amer. Universal Geogr. 		(new ed.)	 II. 23  				The Danish clergy consists of bishops, provosts, and ministers. 1845    S. Austin tr.  L. von Ranke Hist. Reformation in Germany 		(ed. 2)	 II. 507  				Support..from their two provosts—patricians of Nürnberg—in the appointment of evangelical preachers. 1910    Encycl. Brit. I. 167/1  				He was educated for the church, and began his clerical career at Halberstadt, where he attained to the dignity of provost. 1967    J. T. Mcneill Hist. & Char. Calvinism  i. iv. 57  				Haller was aided by the support of a distinguished Bernese family, the De Wattevilles, of whom Jakob was the presiding magistrate, while his son Nicholas was provost of the church of Bern. 1992    Times 		(Nexis)	 6 Apr.  				Only a year after being chosen as the first woman to be regional provost of the church [in Hamburg], the Rev Maria Jepsen emerged at the weekend as the replacement for the retiring bishop.  2.  The specific title of the heads of certain universities or colleges; (North American) a senior administrative officer in certain universities.In earlier instances, a survival from the ecclesiastical establishments in which these originated; in later use an extension of the name to subsequent foundations. The title still applies to the heads of Oriel, Queen's, and Worcester Colleges at Oxford, King's College, Cambridge, and Trinity College, Dublin, to the heads of certain British public schools, including Eton, and to the principals of some other colleges (e.g. Trinity College in the University of Toronto) and universities. In the U.S. the title is now usually applied to a high-ranking administrative officer (rather than the head) at a college or university. ΘΚΠ society > education > educational administration > university administration > 			[noun]		 > head of college master1389 rector1434 provost1442 president1448 head1550 head of house1570 sub-rector1629 skull1721 prex1828 prexy1871 society > education > teaching > teacher > schoolteacher or schoolmaster > 			[noun]		 > head teacher rector1434 provost1442 headmaster1576 regent1583 gymnasiarch1682 headmistress1730 headteacher1758 principal1827 archididascalus1844 head1889 1442    Rolls of Parl. V. 45/2  				Please it to youre wise discretions..to graunte his Lettres Patentz..to the Provost and the College of the same place [sc. Eton]. 1450    Rolls of Parl. V. 173/2  				Alwey forseyn, that the Provost and Scolers of oure College Roiale of oure Lady and Seint Nicholas of Cambrigge, nor the Provost and Collage Roial of oure Lady of Eton..be charged bycause of the said Graunte. 1531–2    Act 23 Hen. VIII c. 19  				Archedeacons maisters prouostes presidentes wardens felowes bretherne scholers. 1581    R. Mulcaster Positions xli. 243  				Being himselfe prouost of the kings colledge in Cambridge. 1638    W. Chillingworth Relig. Protestants  i. v. §47. 270  				That D. Potter cannot leave being Provost of Q. Colledge. 1669    T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. I  iii. ix. 93  				He concludes with a Curator or Provist of the whole Discipline [sc. Plato's Sacred College]. 1691    A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses I. 45  				He..professed Theology in the Coll. of S. Salvator at S. Andrews, whereof he was made Provost. 1720    Magna Britannia I. 203/2  				Eaton..is noted chiefly for a fair and beautiful College..wherein are placed a Provost, seven Fellows, two Schoolmasters, two Conducts, an Organist, [etc.]. 1755    B. Franklin Rules & Statutes of College 11 July in  Papers 		(1963)	 VI. 106  				Upon the Death, Cession or Removal of the Provost, the Vice-Provost shall exercise all the said Powers. 1812    Orig. Charter Columbia Coll. 		(1836)	 35  				The trustees of Columbia college have, by their petition, prayed that the provost of the said college may be eligible as a trustee of said college. 1839    H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe III. i. 10  				From a press established at Eton by himself, provost of that college. 1884    Cent. Mag. Dec. 170/1  				Each year..the Lord Chancellor and judges, the Provost of Trinity College, and other notabilities parade thrice around the statue. 1929    H. Hale Bellot University College London 413  				In 1900 the office of Principal was established... In 1907 the title was changed to that of Provost. 1937    R. Kipling Something of Myself i. 10  				I was shown an Ancient of Days who, I was told, was the Provost of Oriel. 1988    Toronto Star 		(Nexis)	 23 July  j11  				Recently..an ugly, jarring and totally out-of-place underground garage was added to the magnificent residence of the provost of Trinity College [at the University of Toronto]. 2002    New Yorker 14 Oct. 166/1  				In 1999, Rice resigned as a provost of Stanford and became the head of Bush's team of foreign-policy advisers.  II.  Applied to various secular officers.  3.  An officer or official in charge of some establishment, undertaking, or body of people; an officer responsible for the management of a royal or feudal establishment and the collection of dues; a ruler, manager, steward, overseer, keeper. Now historical.The title prevost, prévôt was formerly extensively given in France to officials having administrative and judicial functions: cf. prévôt n. 4. ΘΚΠ society > authority > delegated authority > one having delegated or derived authority > 			[noun]		 > steward or bailiff in charge of another's property town-reeveeOE reeveeOE gravec1175 procuratorc1300 dispender1340 provost1340 bailiec1375 officerc1375 dispenserc1380 proctora1382 dispensator1382 farmerc1384 approverc1386 husbanda1387 stewardc1405 chamberlain1423 procurer1477 factor1520 bailiff1528 land-steward1535 improver1536 grieve1537 amtman1582 administrator1596 stead-man1609 dapifer1636 vogt1694 house jobber1709 commissioner1760 foreman1774 house agent1793 ground-officer1815 land-agent1846 wic-reeve1853 steadward1876 house farmer1882 house-knacker1884 land-sergeant1894 1340    Ayenbite 		(1866)	 37 (MED)  				Þe greate [thieves] byeþ of þe kueade and þe ontrewe reuen, prouos, and bedeles. a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1959)	 Gen. xl. 9  				Þe prouost [L. praepositus] of botelers befor tolde his sweuen. ?a1425						 (c1380)						    G. Chaucer tr.  Boethius De Consol. Philos.  i. pr. iv. 65  				How ofte eek have I put of or cast out hym Trygwille, provost [L. praepositum] of the kyngis hous! a1500    tr.  A. Chartier Traité de l'Esperance 		(Rawl.)	 		(1974)	 106 (MED)  				Zerces..escaped not the handis of his prouest, which for helping of himself myschevousely slewe him by treson. 1570    J. Dee in  H. Billingsley tr.  Euclid Elements Geom. Math. Præf. sig. diiijv  				The Architect..is..the Hed, the Prouost, the Directer..of all Artificiall workes, and all Artificers. 1598    R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres  v. 136  				A Prouost ouer the horses which draw the Artillery. 1696    London Gaz. No. 3219/4  				Mr. John Braint, Provost of His Majesty's Mint at the Tower of London. 1766    J. Entick Surv. London in  New Hist. London IV. 342 (At the Mint)  				A provost,..blanchers, moniers, &c. 1863    H. Cox Inst. Eng. Govt.  iii. ix. 727  				Relieving them [sc. burgesses] from the interference of Royal provosts in the collection of the King's revenue. 1915    J. Turner Let. July in  C. Warren Somewhere in France 		(2019)	 16  				We went in..with one of the White Fathers of Uganda (in the uniform of a French Red Cross provost). 1993    A. M. Gealt Painting of Golden Age 288  				In 1673 he [sc. Samuel Hoogstraeten] returned to Dordrecht, and received the position of provost of the mint.  a.  More generally: any person appointed to preside over or superintend something, esp. as the representative of the supreme power in a district or sphere of action; (hence) a viceroy, prime minister, delegate. Sometimes simply (without explicit reference to a delegated or appointed position): a ruler, chief, head, captain, governor. Obsolete.Formerly used as a translation of various Latin titles: see note in etymology. ΘΚΠ society > authority > office > holder of office > Roman magistrates and officials > 			[noun]		 > prefect prefectc1380 provosta1382 prefector1611 society > authority > delegated authority > one having delegated or derived authority > 			[noun]		 > deputy or representative of person in authority > representing supreme power provosta1382 prepostc1384 commissary general1434 prepositus1627 society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > governor of province, dependency, or colony > governors by country > 			[noun]		 > ancient Roman > prefect prefectc1380 provosta1382 prefector1611 OE    Old Eng. Martyrol. 		(Julius)	 13 Aug. 179  				Ða het Ualerianus, Decies prafest þæs caseres, gebindan ðysne Ypolitum on wildu hors. OE    Ælfric Gloss. 		(St. John's Oxf.)	 300  				Praepositus, gerefa, oððe prauost. OE    Old Eng. Hexateuch: Exod. 		(Claud.)	 v. 15  				Þa comon Israhela folces prafastas [L. praepositi filiorum Israel] & clypodon to Pharaone & ðus cwædon: Hwi destu þus wiþ ðine þeowas?]			 a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1959)	 Gen. xli. 43  				Þei schulden wyten hym to be prouost [v.r. prouest; a1425 L.V. souereyn; L. præpositum] to all þe lond of Egypte. a1400    Siege Jerusalem 		(Laud)	 		(1932)	 3 (MED)  				In Tiberyus tyme..Pylat was prouost vnder þat prince riche. ?a1425						 (c1380)						    G. Chaucer tr.  Boethius De Consol. Philos.  i. pr. iv. 98  				I took stryf ayens the provost of the pretorie [L. praefectum praetorii] for comune profit. c1480						 (a1400)						    St. Thomas Apostle 9 in  W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. 		(1896)	 I. 129  				Gundoforus..þare kynnge..has send his proveste here abney [L. præpositum Abbanem], bis[i]ly fore to spere a man, þat sic palace can make. c1485						 (    G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys 		(2005)	 103  				A kingis prouost may haue na mare power na has his maister. a1529    J. Skelton Magnyfycence 		(?1530)	 sig. Eiv  				The prowde prouoste of turky lande. c1550    Complaynt Scotl. 		(1979)	 xi. 68  				He [sc. Darius] send his prouest tasifernes vitht gold and siluer to lacedemonia. 1591    H. Savile tr.  Tacitus Ende of Nero: Fower Bks. Hist.  i. 25  				Flauius Sabinus they ordeyned Prouost of the citty [L. urbi præfecere]. 1600    P. Holland tr.  Livy Rom. Hist.  viii. xi. 289  				Their Pretor or Provost [L. prætor] named Millionius, spake these words. 1631    T. Powell Tom of All Trades 7  				Free-Schooles... Some of them..are commonly in the gift of the King, or his Provost, or Substitute in that behalfe.  b.  In extended use: applied to the archangel Michael as leader of the heavenly host. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > deity > angel > 			[noun]		 > order of > archangel > Michael provostc1430 c1430    N. Love Mirror Blessed Life 		(Brasenose e.9)	 		(1908)	 289 (MED)  				The Archaungel Mychael, prouoste of paradys, goynge bifore, tolde the blessid court of heuene that oure lorde Jesu was comynge. 1483						 (    tr.  G. Deguileville Pilgrimage of Soul 		(Caxton)	 		(1859)	  i. ii. 3  				I wil bringe hym bifore Mychael the prouost of heuene. a1500						 (    Poems from Pilgrimage of Soul 		(Egerton)	 in  F. J. Furnivall Wks. T. Hoccleve: Regement Princes 		(1897)	 p. lix (MED)  				Michael, prouost, on the I take recorde..sere prouost Michael graciows, And alle the Aungeles of thi company That him enfamed, hath foriuged thus. 1521    in  Market Harb. Records 		(1890)	 216  				The holy Archangell Mychell, the provest off paradyse.  5.   a.  An officer charged with the apprehension, custody, and punishment of offenders. Now historical.Sometimes difficult to distinguish from sense  6b. In France many of the officials called prevost (prévôt) were specially charged with the keeping of public order and the apprehension, custody, trial, and punishment of offenders, for which they had considerable powers of summary jurisdiction: hence the military use at sense  5b. ΘΚΠ society > law > law enforcement > law-enforcement or peace-officer > 			[noun]		 > one whose duty is arresting offenders provosta1382 alguazila1530 prévôt1577 shoulder-clappera1616 provo1692 trap1705 felon-setter1864 arrester1880 a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1969)	 Jer. xxxvii. 14  				He, forsoþe was prouost [L. praepositus] vp on þe prisoun. a1470    T. Malory Morte Darthur 		(Winch. Coll.)	 217  				They all rode unto Paryse and beleffte the presoners there with the pure proveste. 1525    Ld. Berners tr.  J. Froissart Cronycles II. clxxxv. 564  				The kyng commaunded hym and sayd: Prouost, get you men togyther well horsed, and pursewe that traytour syr Peter of Craon. 1604    E. Grimeston tr.  J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies  vii. xix. 552  				A few dayes after hee sent a provost..to take this Sorcerer. a1616    W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure 		(1623)	  i. ii. 106  				Here comes Signior Claudio, led by the Prouost to  prison.       View more context for this quotation 1617    F. Moryson Itinerary  iii. 289  				(Netherlanders Commonwealth) Among the apprehenders, the chiefe are called Prouosts, and they of old had power to hang vagabonds. 1709    J. Strype Ann. Reformation I. xxxii. 328  				The provost of Paris, being here in London, was especially tampering in treasonous practices against the Queen. 1841    G. P. R. James Brigand xxvii  				‘Fetch the provost,’ exclaimed another. 1873    J. Lewes Digest of Census 1871 204  				[Guernsey] The provost or Queen's sheriff . 1954    Amer. Hist. Rev. 59 554  				[Louis IX] repeated the provision that the provost and his justices were not to put their hands on any scholar nor were they to take him into custody, unless he was engaged in an act requiring his immediate arrest.  b.  Military. An officer of the military police in a garrison, camp, or the field; a member of the military police. In later use sometimes short for provost marshal n., provost sergeant n. at  Compounds.In this sense usually pronounced /prəʊˈvəʊ/ (after French prévôt) and sometimes written provo n.1 ΘΚΠ society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > 			[noun]		 > military police > military policeman provost marshal1535 provost1590 field marshal1690 provost sergeant1825 Jack1854 military policeman1883 MP1889 redcap1919 shore patrolman1944 snowdrop1944 society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > leader or commander > officer according to function > 			[noun]		 > officer in charge of discipline or prisoners provost marshal1535 provost1590 marshala1599 provost sergeant1825 Jack1854 1590    R. Williams Briefe Disc. Warre 14  				The office of the Marshal, is painful & great, for he medleth with the whole affaires of the warres; he hath to serue and to help him, the Serieant maior, Quarter masters, Prouosts, and Captaine of the Spions. 1607    J. Hunt Draught St. Georges Fort, Virginia 		(map)	  				The Prouestes howse. 1643    H. Hexham tr.  Laws Marshall Discipl. United Prov. 78  				The Quartter-master & the Provost goe in the Ship appointed for the Officers of the feild. 1748    St. James's Evening Post  				M. de Beauvais, Grand Provost of the Army..with all his Marshalsey and 80 Grenadiers. 1799    Duke of Wellington Dispatches 		(1837)	 I. 37  				I wish you would send the Provost here... Until some of the plunderers are hanged it is vain to expect to stop the plunder. 1894    ‘J. S. Winter’ Red Coats 44  				Perhaps she had less cause for bitterness..owing to her superior position as the wife of the Provost. 1951    E. Lambert Twenty Thousand Thieves 178  				A provost I got into a blue with in Tel Aviv was barkin' the orders. 1979    Amer. Poetry Rev. Mar. 39/3  				That was the place where the provosts in Jesselton broke his jaw in 1963. 1988    Guardian 		(Nexis)	 31 Mar.  				About 150 military police and provosts, who look after military offenders, will supervise the prisoners. ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > 			[noun]		 > military provo1705 provost1728 conjee-house1835 detention barrack1906 mush1917 glasshouse1925 stockade1945 1728    S. H. Jrnl. 27 Jan. in  J. W. Fortescue Following Drum 		(1931)	 i. 21  				The corporal..& the centinel..are both put into the provost & I suppose will both be hanged. 1780    W. Heath Heath Papers III. 112  				He has flung into the provost many of our friends. 1783    Double Conspiracy  v. iii. 83  				Nothing on'y put a pair of iron ruffles on me, and flung me into the Provost, where I've lain 'bove this four months. 1890    Cent. Dict.  				Provost... A temporary prison in which the military police confine prisoners until they are disposed of.  6.   a.  The head of a Scottish municipal corporation or burgh (equivalent to mayor in England: see mayor n. 2). Lord Provost: a title given to the provost of certain major Scottish cities, such as Edinburgh (since c1486), Glasgow (since 1690), Aberdeen, and Dundee. ΘΚΠ society > authority > office > holder of office > magistrate > municipal magistrate > 			[noun]		 > chief magistrate or mayor > in Scotland provost1387 provostera1661 1387    in  J. D. Marwick Charters Edinb. 		(1871)	 35  				Androw Yutsoun prowest of the Burgh of Edynburgh. 1450    in  J. D. Marwick Charters Edinb. 		(1871)	 70  				Be oure well belovettis the provest and communite of Edynburgh. 1487    in  J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. 		(1869)	 I. 52  				The quhilk day a richt nobill michty Patrick lord Hales my lord provest chosin of this burgh for this yeir. a1525    Crying ane Playe 21 in  W. A. Craigie Asloan MS 		(1925)	 II. 150  				Prowest baillies officeris And honorable Induellaris..Of all þis fair towne. 1563    N. Winȝet Certain Tractates 		(1888)	 I. 94  				The prouestis and ballies of euiry burgh. 1639    Duke of Hamilton in  Hamilton Papers 		(1880)	 70  				A letter of yours derected to the prouist and balleifes of Edinburg. 1685    A. Skene Mem. Royall-burghs Scotl. 134  				Concerning the duties and office of the provest..The first and chiefest magistrat in all burghs-royal is the provest. a1713    A. Pitcairne Assembly 		(1722)	  iv. iii. 74  				He has just as much Mother wit as fits him to be a Provost of a Town. 1753    W. Maitland Hist. Edinb. 225  				The chief Magistrate of Edinburgh who is dignified with the Title of Lord Provost, is an Officer of great Authority. 1803    Gazetteer Scotl. at Aberdeen  				Its civil government is vested in a provost, denominated lord provost, 4 bailies, a dean of guild, [etc.]. 1837    Times 22 Dec. 6/3  				The Court of Session decided on Saturday last the important question as to which of the proclaimants to the office of Lord Provost of Glasgow was legally entitled to it. 1882    J. Grant Cassell's Old & New Edinb. II. 278/2  				Patrick Hepburn, Lord Hailes [c1486]..was the first designated ‘my Lord Provost’, probably because he was a peer of the realm. 1947    H. W. Meikle Scotland 107  				The chairman of the town council, the Provost, holds his position for three years. 1973    Courier & Advertiser 		(Dundee)	 21 Feb. 11/8  				Provost John Crawford..said he was disappointed at the vote. 2002    Scotsman 		(Electronic ed.)	 30 Apr.  				The city's Lord Provost, Alex Mosson, is Old Labour to the core, but he is balanced by the more progressive views of Charles Gordon, leader of Glasgow city council.  b.  Applied to the chief magistrate of any town, esp. a French, Flemish, or other Continental town. historical in later use.Sometimes passing into  5a   (see note at that sense). ΘΚΠ society > authority > office > holder of office > magistrate > municipal magistrate > 			[noun]		 > chief magistrate or mayor > of a foreign town or city provostc1390 Town Major1721 c1390    G. Chaucer Prioress's Tale 1806  				They for the prouost sente..And..the Iewes leet he bynde. ?a1400						 (a1338)						    R. Mannyng Chron. 		(Petyt)	  ii. 294  				Þe prouest of þe toun [Fr. le provost de la vile] [sc. Bruges]..þouht to do tresoun vnto his lord, þe erle..þe preuest with þe burgeis þat day to conseile gede. a1425						 (?a1400)						    G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose 		(Hunterian)	 6812  				Se what gold han usurers..Bailifs, bedels, provost, countours—These lyven wel nygh by ravyne. c1515    Ld. Berners tr.  Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux 		(1882–7)	 vii. 15  				Than they sent for ye provost of Gerone. 1547    tr.  A. de Marcourt Bk. Marchauntes 		(new ed.)	 ciij  				The hygh prouost of these marchants..kepeth his bank vnder exchang to all people—conuertynge leade into golde. 1607    E. Grimeston tr.  S. Goulart Admirable & Memorable Hist. 227  				Shee married againe with Michael Vogel Prouost of Bollickhein, a village three houres iourney from Basil. 1706    Phillips's New World of Words 		(new ed.)	  				Provost of Merchants, the chief Magistrate or Mayor of the City of Paris in France. 1720    Magna Britannia I. 479  				The Government of this City was at First in Four Bailiffs, called by the Saxons Portgreeves; but afterwards they were styled Provosts and Stewards. 1836    G. W. Lovell 		(title)	  				The Provost of Bruges. 1920    Amer. Jrnl. Theol. 24 91  				In that year [sc. 1229] Pope Gregory IX ordered..the provost of the city [sc. Livonia] to discontinue trade with Novgorod. 1989    Signs 14 479  				The female officers present in some of the female-dominated guilds of Paris..were appointed by the provost of the city.  7.  An assistant fencing-master. Now historical. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > fencing > 			[noun]		 > fencing-master > assistant provost1545 usher1545 1545    R. Ascham Toxophilus  i. f. 45v  				Of fence..there is not onely Masters to teache it, wyth his Prouostes Vshers Scholers and othernames of arte and Schole. 1615    in  J. Strutt Sports & Past.  iii. vi. §22  				They which desire to be taught at their admission are called scholars, and, as theyr profit they take degrees, and proceed to be provosts of defence. 1616    B. Jonson Cynthias Revels 		(rev. ed.)	  v. iii, in  Wks. I. 239  				We,..doe giue leaue and licence to our Prouost, Acolastvs-Polypragmon-Asotvs, to play his Masters prize, against all Masters whatsoeuer. 1699    A. Boyer Royal Dict. at Prevost de sale d'armes  				The Provost, or Usher of a Fencing-School. 2002    R. Cohen By Sword  i. ii. 31  				Nine original masters, together with eleven provosts, were duly registered. They created four ranks..: scholar, free scholar, provost, and master, with ascent through the ranks based on success in ‘prizefights’. Compounds  provost cell  n. a cell for confining military prisoners. ΚΠ 1872    Times 16 Dec. 5/6  				The regiment is quartered singly at a station, and provost cells are actually under the charge of the provost-sergeant. 1902    Webster's Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Suppl.  				Provost cell, in the British service, a military prison for soldiers confined, by order of the commanding officer or by sentence of court martial, for periods not exceeding forty-two days. 2003    Africa News 		(Nexis)	 20 Mar.  				Military police..marched the two non-commissioned officers to a waiting car which drove them to the provost cell, en-route to prison. ΚΠ 1748    J. Wallis in  Gentleman's Mag. 		(1779)	 49 495  				If the proud gentleman that thinks himself slighted should happen to sit provost-place as they call it, he sits at the head of his table in all the agonies of concealed ill-nature. ΚΠ 1466    in  J. T. Gilbert Cal. Anc. Rec. Dublin 		(1889)	 I. 322  				Undre the Prowost seall of the saide citte.   provost sergeant  n. a sergeant of the military police (cf. sense  5b). ΘΚΠ society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > 			[noun]		 > military police > military policeman provost marshal1535 provost1590 field marshal1690 provost sergeant1825 Jack1854 military policeman1883 MP1889 redcap1919 shore patrolman1944 snowdrop1944 society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > leader or commander > officer according to function > 			[noun]		 > officer in charge of discipline or prisoners provost marshal1535 provost1590 marshala1599 provost sergeant1825 Jack1854 1825    Times 1 Feb. 3/4  				No one was allowed to see M'Intyre except in presence of the Provost Sergeant. 1868    Queen's Regulations & Orders Army ⁋824  				The Provost Serjeant is to cause the prisoners to wash themselves once a day. 1990    A. Beevor Inside Brit. Army iv. 46  				The R S M..is likely to be regarded by the officers as a ‘great regimental character’—as is..his sidekick, the provost sergeant. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † provostv. Obsolete. rare.   transitive (in passive). To be handed over to the provost marshal to be dealt with summarily and to receive corporal punishment. N.E.D. (1909) notes: ‘Apparently a short-lived word used c1837’. ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > corporal punishment > administer corporal punishment			[verb (transitive)]		 > hand over for provost1837 1837    J. Richardson Brit. Legion 		(ed. 2)	 ix. 241  				Men found to be incorrigible, have first been provosted, then marched forth disgracefully by beat of drum from their regiments. 1839    A. Somerville Hist. Brit. Legion xi. 242  				In four months he had been eleven times provosted, and once flogged by sentence of a court-martial. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online September 2018). < | 
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