surveillance

noun
/sɚˈveɪ.ləns/US/səˈveɪ.ləns/UK/səɾˈveː.ljəns/

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from French surveillance (“a watching over, overseeing, supervision”), from surveiller (“to watch, oversee”), from sur- (“over”) + veiller (“to watch”), from Middle French, from Old French veillier (“to stay awake”), from Latin vigilāre (“to be watchful”). More at vigilant.

  1. derived from vigilō

Definitions

  1. Close observation of an individual or group

    Close observation of an individual or group; person or persons under suspicion.

    • The surveillance program includes at least 480 LPRs that scan and record about 16.2 million vehicles per week and stores that data for two years, he wrote in the court filing.
  2. Continuous monitoring of disease occurrence for example.

  3. Systematic observation of places and people by visual, aural, electronic, photographic or…

    Systematic observation of places and people by visual, aural, electronic, photographic or other means.

    • The threat of terrorism to the British lies in the overreaction to it of British governments. Each one in turn clicks up the ratchet of surveillance, intrusion and security. Each one diminishes liberty.
    • Cook was making an impassioned plea to end the technology industry’s collection and sale of user data. “This is surveillance,” he continued.
    • And that sight will become more common in the coming years, as the city’s police pursue an ambitious campaign to install thousands of cameras to elevate their surveillance capabilities.
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. In criminal law, an investigation process by which police gather evidence about crimes,…

      In criminal law, an investigation process by which police gather evidence about crimes, or suspected crime, through continued observation of persons or places.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for surveillance. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA