warder

Noun

 * 1) A guard, especially in a prison.
 * 2) * 1885, (translator), , Volume 5, 368th Night, p. 26,
 * So the guards carried him to the jail, thinking to lay him by the heels there for the night; but, when the warders saw his beauty and loveliness, they could not find it in their hearts to imprison him: they made him sit with them without the walls; and, when food came to them, he ate with them what sufficed him.
 * 1)  A truncheon or staff carried by a king or commander, used to signal commands.
 * 2) * 1595,, Civil Wars, in The Poetical Works of Mr. Samuel Daniel, Volume II, London: R. Gosling, 1718, Book I, stanza 62, p. 25,
 * When, lo! the king chang’d suddenly his Mind,
 * Casts down his Warder to arrest them there;
 * 1) One who or that which wards or repels.
 * When, lo! the king chang’d suddenly his Mind,
 * Casts down his Warder to arrest them there;
 * 1) One who or that which wards or repels.
 * 1) One who or that which wards or repels.
 * 1) One who or that which wards or repels.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:, тъмничар
 * Burmese:
 * Galician:
 * German: ; ;
 * Hungarian:
 * Irish: bairdéir
 * Italian:, , , ,
 * Portuguese:
 * Scottish Gaelic: maor-coimhid
 * Telugu:

Etymology
From.

Verb

 * 1) to keep