policy
To reduce to order; regulate by laws; police.
nounA written contract by which a person, company, or party engages to pay a certain sum on certain contingencies, as in the case of fire or shipwreck, in the event of death, etc., on the condition of receiving a fixed sum or percentage on the amount of the risk, or certain periodical payments. See
A ticket or warrant for money in the public funds.
nounA form of gambling in which bets are made on numbers to be drawn by lottery. [U. S.]
nounPolity; administration; public business.
nounObject or course of conduct, or the principle or body of principles to be observed in conduct; specifically, the system of measures or the line of conduct which a ruler, minister, government, or party adopts and pursues as best for the interests of the country, as regards its foreign or its domestic affairs: as, a spirited foreign policy; the commercial policy of the United States; a policy of peace; public policy.
nounPrudence or wisdom in action, whether public or private; especially, worldly wisdom: as, honesty is the best policy.
nounIn Scotland, the pleasure-grounds around a nobleman’s or gentleman’s country house.
transitive verbTo regulate by laws; to reduce to order.
nounCivil polity.