Also known as sergeant-at-arms, serjeant at arms, sergeant at arms
right|thumb|100px|A ceremonial mace (English, 17th century) as carried by the monarch's sergeants-at-arms on state occasions.
right|thumb|100px|A ceremonial mace (English, 17th century) as carried by the monarch's sergeants-at-arms on state occasions.
A serjeant-at-arms or sergeant-at-arms is an officer appointed by a deliberative body, usually a legislature, to keep order during its meetings. The word "serjeant" is derived from the Latin , which means "servant".
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).