guardian

views updated May 21 2018

guard·i·an / ˈgärdēən/ • n. a defender, protector, or keeper: self-appointed guardians of public morality. ∎  a person who looks after and is legally responsible for someone who is unable to manage their own affairs, esp. an incompetent or disabled person or a child whose parents have died. ∎  the superior of a Franciscan convent.DERIVATIVES: guard·i·an·ship / ship/ n.

Guardian

views updated May 18 2018

Guardian. Newspaper which has come to embody the ideology of liberal, middle-class, regional, and metropolitan England in popular perception. From its founding as the weekly Manchester Guardian by John Edward Taylor in 1821, it was a radical voice, demanding liberal economic and political reform. It became a daily from 1855, but did not drop its ‘Manchester’ prefix until 1959. It is notable today as the only national daily which has a strong regional input to supplement its London base, and which has escaped the ownership of any press magnate, preserving the democratic Scott Trust structure which has run the paper from 1936.

Douglas J. Allen

Guardian

views updated Jun 08 2018

Guardian ★½ 2001 (R)

So soldier Van Peebles witnesses the escape of a demon while stationed in the middle east (although he doesn't know what he's really seen) and 12 years later must battle said demon to save the world. There are other plot threads but they don't make much sense either. 89m/C VHS, DVD . James Remar, Ice-T, Mario Van Peebles; D: John Terlesky, Gary J. Tunnicliffe; W: Jeff Yagher. VIDEO

Guardian

views updated May 23 2018

GUARDIAN

A person lawfully invested with the power, and charged with the obligation, of taking care of and managing the property and rights of a person who, because of age, understanding, or self-control, is considered incapable of administering his or her own affairs.