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I read a sentence in a chapter in my history book which was:

A century ago the British arrived in Hindostan and gradually entertained troops in their service and became masters of every state. Source

Now, I'm unable to figure out what "entertained in service" imply here.

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This is a very strange use of the word "entertain".

The Cambridge dictionary has this definition:

entertain verb (INVITE) ​ [ I or T ]

to invite someone to your home and give food and drink to them:

We entertain a lot of people, mainly business associates of my wife's.

Now that I live on my own, I don't entertain much.

The Oxford dictionary provides the following in the “fine print”:

Origin Late Middle English: from French entretenir, based on Latin inter ‘among’ + tenere ‘to hold’. The word originally meant ‘maintain, continue’, later ‘maintain in a certain condition, treat in a certain way’, also ‘show hospitality’ (late 15th century).

In your example, the meaning of the word "entertain" is probably a very archaic usage: a direct reference to the origin of the word: “to hold” + “among”.

Using this definition, the following sentence:

A century ago the British arrived in Hindostan and gradually entertained troops in their service and became masters of every state

Would mean:

A century ago the British arrived in [the subcontinent] and gradually brought troops into it and controlled all of its regions.

This is very unusual writing — I assume your example is British and from the early twentieth century, or earlier. American English would never use the word “entertain” this way.

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  • The cited text isn't actually "British". See this 1943 link, which cites the source as "contemporary" (i.e.- from around 1857, a date referenced in the linked "footnote"). And that more extended context includes reference to the British, which strongly implies it was written by an Indian (an early example of "Indian English"?). Commented May 7, 2019 at 13:44

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