escort
An escort is selling your body for pleasure , not to be confused with a prostitute
English
Etymology
French escorte, from Italian scorta, a guard or guide, from scorgere, to perceive, discern, lead, from Latin ex out, quite + corrigere to correct, set right. See correct.
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈɛ.skɔɹt/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈɛ.skɔːt/
Audio (US) (file)
Noun
escort (plural escorts)
- A group of people or vehicles, generally armed, who go with a person or people of importance to safeguard them on a journey or mission.
- 1898, Arnold Henry Savage Landor, In the Forbidden Land Chapter LXXXIII
- The soldier who was pulling at the other end was clumsily unhorsed, and I myself was all but thrown by the unexpected jerk. This ludicrous incident at first provoked mirth among my escort, a mirth which their superstitious minds immediately turned into an ill omen.
- 1883, Ambrose Bierce, George Thurston
- Whole squadrons of cavalry escort had sometimes to be sent thundering against a powerful infantry outpost in order that the brief time between the charge and the inevitable retreat might be utilized in sounding a ford or determining the point of intersection of two roads.
- 1898, Arnold Henry Savage Landor, In the Forbidden Land Chapter LXXXIII
- An accompanying person in such a group.
- 1980, Ernest L. Secrest, chapter 9, in My 1102 Days of W.W. II:
- The waves being so high when we and the escorts, which stayed about one quarter mile to each side and ahead of us, were in a trough at the same time and we were unable to see one another.
-
- A guard who travels with a dangerous person, such as a criminal, for the protection of others.
- A group of people attending as a mark of respect or honor.
- An accompanying person in a social gathering, etc.
- 1921, Mary Roberts Rinehart, chapter 5, in More Tish:
- "He'd come in for something to eat—the red-bearded one. We had quite a chat. I told him we were traveling like Stevenson—with a donkey; but that one of the ladies had an abscess on a tooth and was going home. He said it was no place for women and offered himself as an escort."
-
- Protection, care, or safeguard on a journey or excursion.
- 1874, Horatio Alger, chapter 2, in Brave and Bold:
- "I went home with Hester Paine, last evening, from writing school. Just as she had accepted my escort, Halbert came up, and in a condescending way, informed her that he would see her home."
-
- (somewhat euphemistic) A sex worker who does not operate in a brothel, but with whom clients make appointments; a call girl or male equivalent.
- 2014, Jeffrey T. Parsons, Contemporary Research on Sex Work, page 87:
- Of the 68 women, 26 reported that they had worked on the streets and as an escort over the course of their career as a prostitute, 18 exclusively as a street prostitute, and 8 as an escort only (i.e., working for an escort service).
-
Translations
group of people who provide safety
accompanying person
|
|
protection, care, or safeguard on a journey or excursion
|
See also
- escort agency
- escort service
- police escort
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ɛˈskɔɹt/, /ɪˈskɔɹt/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɛˈskɔːt/, /ɪˈskɔːt/
Verb
escort (third-person singular simple present escorts, present participle escorting, simple past and past participle escorted)
- To attend to in order to guard and protect; to accompany as a safeguard; to give honorable or ceremonious attendance to
- 2009, Allen D. Grimshaw, A Social History of Racial Violence
- He reported that the police escorted the children five or six blocks beyond Natural Bridge Avenue and at that point stopped the white children who were following and shooed them back to the park.
- 1837, Mrs Chadwick, Novels of Nature
- Lord Lyndsey, ever attentive, escorted his Lady to the carriage
- 2009, Allen D. Grimshaw, A Social History of Racial Violence
- To go with someone as a partner, for example on a formal date.
Translations
To attend to in order to guard and protect
|
|
References
- escort in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.