Guard Explained
Guard or guards may refer to:
Professional occupations
- Bodyguard, who protects an individual from personal assault
- Crossing guard, who stops traffic so pedestrians can cross the street
- Lifeguard, who rescues people from drowning
- Prison guard, who supervises prisoners in a prison or jail
- Security guard, who protects property, assets, or people
- Conductor (rail) § Train guard, in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, and India
Computing and telecommunications
Governmental and military
See also: List of protective service agencies.
- Border guard, a state security agency
- Coast guard, responsible for coastal defence and offshore rescue
- Colour guard, a detachment of soldiers assigned to the protection of regimental colors
- Commander-in-Chief's Guard, a unit of the Continental Army that protected General George Washington
- Foot guards, a senior infantry unit in some armies, often with ceremonial duties
- Garda Síochána, Irish police force informally known as Guards
- Guard of honour, primarily ceremonial
- Guards (Russia), elite military in pre-revolutionary Russia
- Guards unit, a title earned by distinguished units in the former Soviet Union and in some contemporary ex-Soviet states
- Police in medieval contexts
- Royal Guard, military bodyguards, soldiers or armed retainers responsible for the protection of a royal person, often an elite unit of the regular armed forces.
Sports
Other uses
- Guard (surname)
- Guards (band), an American rock band
- Guards (steamboat)
- Guard (weapon), part of the handle of a sword designed to protect the user's hand
- Guard (knife), finger protection barrier between the handle and the blade
- Guard dogs, guard llamas and guard geese, animals employed to watch for unwanted or unexpected animals or people
- Abdominal guarding, in medicine, the tensing of the abdominal wall muscles to guard inflamed organs
- Mate guarding, guarding of a potential or former mate from other individuals
- Mouthguard, a protective device for the mouth
- Wächter (Anatol) (Guards), several monumental sculptures by Anatol Herzfeld
See also