[ noun ] the leader of a troop of Scouts <noun.person>
As an engineer at Ford, Douglas R. Dixon lived the kind of pleasant, unremarkable life of countless auto-industry professionals: a house in the suburbs, duties as a scoutmaster, fishing with his sons.
Citing the First Amendment, the judge said forcing the Boy Scouts to make the man a scoutmaster would hinder them from promoting their view that homosexuality is wrong.
For Henry V, one of his triumphs, Mr. Olivier borrows Ralph Richardson's assessment of the role: "a scoutmaster."