noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
deputy/vice chairman
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Barrett serves as vice chairman.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
appointed
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By 1914 he had been appointed deputy superintendent at Dehra Dun.
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He was elected a director of the rapidly expanding Company in 1767, and was appointed deputy chairman the following year.
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The reformed parliament with temporarily appointed deputies has already established itself as a genuine decision-making legislature.
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Paul Lawson from Melbourne had worked with Oz in Sydney and he automatically came round, and was appointed deputy editor.
parliamentary
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Six parliamentary deputies faced criminal prosecution once their parliamentary immunity had been removed.
■ NOUN
chair
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The delegations were headed by the deputy chairs of the republican Supreme Soviets.
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Kohl was elected chair by 98.5 percent of the vote and de Maizière deputy chair by 97.4 percent of the vote.
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The Secretary of State for the Environment also selects board members, chairs and deputy chairs.
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Jaroslav Volf, acting party leader during Dubcek's illness, was re-elected first deputy chair .
chairman
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Sean O'Dwyer, deputy chairman of Desmond &038; Sons, has good reason to agree.
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Dino Adriano, chairman of Homebase, became the Sainsbury's executive director in charge of Shaw's as deputy chairman.
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Tony Trythall as chairman and deputy chairman, will remain in place.
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Last year, she became deputy chairman of the Conservative Party.
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High Court judges are the deputy chairmen of the Parliamentary Boundary Commissions.
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Dundas Hamilton, former deputy chairman of the Stock Exchange, was once in the Brownies.
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Mr Gough is to be chairman and joint senior partner with Mr Bullock deputy chairman and joint senior partner.
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He had been deputy chairman and chairman-designate since November 1985.
chief
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Tashkent's deputy chief of police and the deputy city procurator allegedly watched the attack but did not intervene to stop it.
commander
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Li Jing, hitherto deputy commander of the navy, was appointed as his deputy.
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According to an Amal statement two people died in this attack, including the group's local deputy commander , Mahmud Haydar.
director
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He was promoted to secretary in 1968 becoming deputy director general in 1974.
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It adds up to a recovery but not a boom, Sudhir Junankar, the deputy director of economic affairs said yesterday.
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Peter Bibby has retired as deputy director of social services in Brent.
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Ruth Eisenberg, the Institute's deputy director of practice regulation, has replaced June Ward as director of communications.
editor
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Several deputy editors and the press had footplate rides.
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A year later he moved again, to become deputy editor of the party's turgid theoretical review, Tarsadalmi Szemle.
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The deputy editor had tried to be helpful.
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Joined the Guardian in 1963, and served successively as deputy editor , managing editor and City editor until 1974.
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Paul Lawson from Melbourne had worked with Oz in Sydney and he automatically came round, and was appointed deputy editor .
governor
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Shaikh Abdullah bin Said bin Abdul-Aziz al-Thani became deputy governor at under-secretary level.
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He persuaded the bishop of London to be a governor and Newton to become a deputy governor.
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The new state governments each consisted of a governor , deputy governor and a cabinet of ministers.
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In 1678 he was chosen deputy governor and in the following year was elected governor of the colony.
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The prison governor is on leave; the deputy governor refused to comment.
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In 1648 he was promoted lieutenant-colonel and deputy governor and signed a letter protesting at the treaty with the king at Newport.
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He was deputy governor of the bank 1709-11 and governor 1711-13.
head
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In the original submission the deputy head felt that the impending school closure was a strong argument for receiving the money.
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In this situation, the role of the deputy head might be undefined or non-existent, except in a symbolic sense.
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The headteacher had been appointed in November 1981 and the deputy head and senior master had both arrived since.
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Gen. Khan Aqa, deputy head of state security, was killed by a car bomb in Kabul on Nov. 3.
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The latter is the technique used by the deputy head .
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All deputy heads need a clear job specification and a place in school development and decision-making commensurate with their experience and seniority.
judge
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The deputy judge gave very careful consideration to all the evidence to which I have referred.
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The deputy judge concluded that the onus of establishing testamentary competence had not been discharged.
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There is one authority on the point that was not available to the deputy judge .
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The deputy judge had to take into account also the other evidence relevant to the issue of testamentary competence.
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The deputy judge ruled against this contention.
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This argument found favour with the deputy judge .
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The deputy judge refused to admit the document to probate.
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The background facts, as found by the deputy judge , are these.
leader
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The party's deputy leader , Donald McKinnon, immediately resigned as defence spokesperson in protest over the volteface.
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However, over the weekend, the deputy Leader of the Opposition contradicted that.
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The post of deputy leader went to Margaret Beckett, who won 57.3 percent of the vote.
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Roy Hattersley's simultaneous resignation as deputy leader also opens up the increasingly sterile debate on constitutional reform.
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George Brown, deputy leader , was in his hey-day.
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Coun Popple represents the Acklam ward and is deputy leader of the Conservative group on the council.
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His presence as deputy leader would also help the left to breathe beyond this immediate post-election period.
leadership
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It is possible he will be a candidate for both the leadership and deputy leadership.
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All three challengers for the deputy leadership are members of the Club.
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In 1988 he made an unsuccessful attempt to challenge Mr Hattersley for the deputy leadership .
lieutenant
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He had acquired an estate at Llanherne in Carmarthenshire and became a deputy lieutenant of that county in July 1674.
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The invitation to become deputy Lieutenant came in June this year, he still doesn't know why.
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In 1623 he was deputy lieutenant in Cambridgeshire, and in 1625, a colonel of the Suffolk regiments defending the coasts.
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He was a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and deputy lieutenant of the county.
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In practice, most of them have previously been deputy lieutenants .
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Named one of Parliament's deputy lieutenants in March 1642, his subsequent military record was undistinguished.
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He was a justice of the peace, served as sheriff of the county, and became a deputy lieutenant in 1585.
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He was a deputy lieutenant of Selkirkshire and an honorary sheriff substitute.
manager
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There may be a deputy manager and one or more senior staff.
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Richard, 32, deputy manager of a sports centre, returned home to Leeds.
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But the girlfriend of deputy manager John Onanuga leapt to his defence.
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He was previously deputy manager at the Arcade Hotel, Portsmouth.
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So it had been throughout the fifteen years he had been deputy manager , so it would ever be.
mayor
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Cohn-Bendit is today deputy mayor of Frankfurt.
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She replaced Ruth Feldgrill-Zankel who had resigned to become deputy mayor of Graz.
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The deputy mayor is not vice-chairman of the council.
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The former deputy mayor of Lakhdaria was arrested.
minister
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A number of deputy ministers were also appointed.
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There were in addition 23 ministers of state and three deputy ministers.
speaker
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Another doesn't vote, because he's deputy speaker , so Major gets his way in Central South.
■ VERB
appoint
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Like any office holder, he could appoint his own deputy .
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Problems by the bushel await Prior and his recently appointed team of deputies .
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He seems also to have had the right to appoint deputies to act for him in individual duchy lordships.
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Then appoint a deputy to take over the command of the Warden's duties and forces - possibly Sir Simon himself.
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When Amis became literary editor of the New Statesman, he appointed Barnes his deputy .
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Li Jing, hitherto deputy commander of the navy, was appointed as his deputy.
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Limbo, the direct marketing agency, has appointed Linda Rost deputy managing director.
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The Secretary of State also appoints the chairman and deputy chairman of each body.
become
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Shaikh Abdullah bin Said bin Abdul-Aziz al-Thani became deputy governor at under-secretary level.
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He became deputy chairman of the merged business.
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She replaced Ruth Feldgrill-Zankel who had resigned to become deputy mayor of Graz.
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A year later he moved again, to become deputy editor of the party's turgid theoretical review, Tarsadalmi Szemle.
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He persuaded the bishop of London to be a governor and Newton to become a deputy governor.
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He had acquired an estate at Llanherne in Carmarthenshire and became a deputy lieutenant of that county in July 1674.
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However, by running for leader, he is jeopardising his chances of becoming Smith's deputy .
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The invitation to become deputy Lieutenant came in June this year, he still doesn't know why.
elect
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The republic's 245,000 registered voters were to elect deputies to the 42-seat Federal Assembly from 320 candidates representing 21 parties.
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In the recent elections, Bustamante, who had returned from exile, had been elected as a deputy to Congress.
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Peter Reith, an unsuccessful contender for the leadership, was elected as deputy leader.
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The president would no longer be chosen by voters but by an electoral college of supposedly nonpartisan locally elected deputies .
replace
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Gary Kalenge was replaced by his deputy Maj.-Gen.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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He became the deputy head of the FBI at the age of only 36.
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The deputy director is authorized to act in the director's absence.
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the deputy district attorney
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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In addition to intuitive judgements a head, deputy and other colleagues need to make sense to outsiders.
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Richard, 32, deputy manager of a sports centre, returned home to Leeds.
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Rose said the staffing level proposed by the sheriff would put 64 deputies on site with only 140 inmates.
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Since then, Michael has been deputy treasurer on several occasions and chairman once before in 1975.
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The deputy judge inferred that the deceased was seriously confused as to the extent of his assets.