It depends on what you mean. From a gramatical standpoint, "police' can be used as a verb, noun, or adjective. "The police" is a noun, referring to a group of officers or the police department as a whole.
In many places, like Connecticut and Texas, there is no difference between a peace officer and and a police officer. Often times it is boiled down to an officer's personal morals; concepts of actively going after "the bad guys" versus keeping the peace.
There are, however, places where there is a distinction between the two. In California, for example:
Peace Officer: 832PC which includes Correctional Officers (both County and State) as well as all levels of reserve officers. Most agents with the Lottery Commission, ABC, and various other state agencies fall into this category as well.
Police Officer: 830.1. All full time regular Deputies, Highway Patrolman, Park Rangers (if sworn), City Cops, etc
Also, the terms "peace officer" and "police officer" are generally interchangeable in Texas.
The definition and distinction varies from place to place, and can generally be found in the Penal Code of the state you are in. Peace officer can be a general term to include all law enforcers (state patrol, deputies, sheriffs, etc.), but from a personal standpoint it seems to be somewhat of a public relations move.
Public safety officers perform a limited amount of law enforcement duties. They can issue tickets, do crowd control, act as a backup, do crime prevention, and work with the community. A police officer would deal with these things, as well as higher priority calls. For instance, if there was a bank robbery in progress, the police officer would be the one that was sent.
Police officers are generally employed by governmental organizations, and can make arrests, serve warrants and court orders, and carry firearms on and off duty and in plain view or concealed. Security officers usually work for private employers, have limited or no powers of arrest, cannot serve warrants or enforce court orders, and usually do not carry firearms. There are exceptions to both groups, but these characteristics are generally true.
The police force is the organisation A police officer is one person in the police force
there is no difference it's just a nickename for a law enforcment officer
Police can't swim
The name.
"Mountie" is just a slang term for a police officer who works for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Mounties are police officers. There is no difference between the two.
There is no difference, the state police is the division, the trooper is the person.
Warning is in England, caution in USA
Police community relations are the relationships between the police force and people it polices. Community policing is where members of the community carry out police functions.
Police community relations are the relationships between the police force and people it polices. Community policing is where members of the community carry out police functions.
the policy contains many permissions
nothing
Indian police is lazy whereas they are fast they are stronger than us police they are corrupt
police dogs are trained to sniff out drugs and other dangerous stuff such as like bombs.
Size