Need another word that means the same as “entourage”? Find 10 synonyms and 30 related words for “entourage” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Entourage” are: cortege, retinue, suite, escort, company, cortège, train, court, staff, bodyguard
Entourage as a Noun
Definitions of "Entourage" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “entourage” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A group of people attending or surrounding an important person.
- The group following and attending to some important person.
Synonyms of "Entourage" as a noun (10 Words)
bodyguard | A person or group of people employed to escort and protect an important or famous person. |
company | A unit of firefighters including their equipment. A national opera company. |
cortege | A funeral procession. |
cortège | A funeral procession. |
court | A room in which a lawcourt sits. Pay court to the emperor. |
retinue | A group of advisers, assistants, or others accompanying an important person. The rock star s retinue of security guards and personal cooks. |
staff | All the people employed by a particular organization. Hospital staff were not to blame. |
suite | Apartment consisting of a series of connected rooms used as a living unit (as in a hotel. A suite of reception rooms. |
train | A series of consequences wrought by an event. The bride s train was carried by her two young nephews. |
Usage Examples of "Entourage" as a noun
- An entourage of loyal courtiers.
Associations of "Entourage" (30 Words)
aide | Someone who acts as assistant. A presidential aide. |
bodyguard | A group of men who escort and protect some important person. |
captor | A person who captures and holds people or animals. He managed to escape from his captors two nights later. |
chaperone | Accompany as a chaperone. Chaperones sat at the edge of the dance gossiping and watching. |
convoy | A procession of land vehicles traveling together. A convoy of lorries. |
cortege | A funeral procession. |
defence | (psychiatry) an unconscious process that tries to reduce the anxiety associated with instinctive desires. He spoke in defence of a disciplined approach. |
defend | Protect against a challenge or attack. He won the party s nomination to defend the Welsh seat. |
defensible | Able to be protected. A morally defensible penal system. |
fender | The mudguard or area around the wheel well of a vehicle. In Britain they call a fender a wing. |
gargantuan | Enormous. A gargantuan appetite. |
immense | Extremely large or great, especially in scale or degree. Immense numbers of birds. |
ironclad | Covered or protected with iron. An ironclad guarantee. |
large | A garment size for a large person. Add a large clove of garlic. |
oversized | Larger than normal for its kind. An oversized T shirt. |
porter | Dark brown bitter beer brewed from malt partly charred or browned by drying at a high temperature. A hospital porter. |
posse | The body of men above the age of fifteen in a county (excluding peers, the clergy, or the infirm), whom the sheriff could summon to repress a riot or for other purposes. The followers of the so called Techno phenomenon the vibed up whistle posse. |
protect | Shield from danger, injury, destruction, or damage. Free speech is protected under Article 33 of the Constitution. |
protecting | Shielding (or designed to shield) against harm or discomfort. A protecting alibi. |
protector | The title of the head of state in England during the later period of the Commonwealth between 1653 and 1659, first Oliver Cromwell (1653–8), then his son Richard (1658–9). A man who became her protector adviser and friend. |
ranger | A member of a body of armed men. Park rangers. |
retinue | A group of advisers, assistants, or others accompanying an important person. The rock star s retinue of security guards and personal cooks. |
secretive | Inclined to secrecy or reticence about divulging information. She was very secretive about her past. |
sentry | A soldier stationed to keep guard or to control access to a place. Two men stood sentry on the door every evening. |
shelter | Provide shelter for. You re welcome to take shelter from the storm. |
swathe | A row or line of grass, corn, or other crop as it falls or lies when mown or reaped. Vast swathes of countryside. |
tenable | Able to be maintained or defended against attack or objection. A scholarship of 200 per annum tenable for three years. |
titanic | Of exceptional strength, size, or power. A series of titanic explosions. |
ward | The grooves in the bit of a key that correspond to the wards in a lock. The second most marginal ward in Westminster. |