chancellor 音标拼音: [tʃ'ænsəlɚ] [tʃ'ænslɚ]
n . 长官;大臣;总理
长官;大臣;总理
Chancellor n 1 :
the British cabinet minister responsible for finance [
synonym :
{
Chancellor of the Exchequer }, {
Chancellor }]
2 :
the person who is head of state (
in several countries ) [
synonym :
{
chancellor }, {
premier }, {
prime minister }]
3 :
the honorary or titular head of a university Chancellor \
Chan "
cel *
lor \,
n . [
OE .
canceler ,
chaunceler ,
F .
chancelier ,
LL .
cancellarius chancellor ,
a director of chancery ,
fr .
L .
cancelli lattices ,
crossbars ,
which surrounded the seat of judgment .
See {
Chancel }.]
A judicial court of chancery ,
which in England and in the United States is distinctively a court with equity jurisdiction .
[
1913 Webster ]
Note :
The chancellor was originally a chief scribe or secretary under the Roman emperors ,
but afterward was invested with judicial powers ,
and had superintendence over the other officers of the empire .
From the Roman empire this office passed to the church ,
and every bishop has his chancellor ,
the principal judge of his consistory .
In later times ,
in most countries of Europe ,
the chancellor was a high officer of state ,
keeper of the great seal of the kingdom ,
and having the supervision of all charters ,
and like public instruments of the crown ,
which were authenticated in the most solemn manner .
In France a secretary is in some cases called a chancellor .
In Scotland ,
the appellation is given to the foreman of a jury ,
or assize .
In the present German empire ,
the chancellor is the president of the federal council and the head of the imperial administration .
In the United States ,
the title is given to certain judges of courts of chancery or equity ,
established by the statutes of separate States . --
Blackstone .
Wharton .
[
1913 Webster ]
{
Chancellor of a bishop }
or {
Chancellor of a diocese } (
R .
C .
Ch . &
ch .
of Eng .),
a law officer appointed to hold the bishop '
s court in his diocese ,
and to assist him in matter of ecclesiastical law .
{
Chancellor of a cathedral },
one of the four chief dignitaries of the cathedrals of the old foundation ,
and an officer whose duties are chiefly educational ,
with special reference to the cultivation of theology .
{
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster },
an officer before whom ,
or his deputy ,
the court of the duchy chamber of Lancaster is held .
This is a special jurisdiction .
{
Chancellor of a university },
the chief officer of a collegiate body .
In Oxford ,
he is elected for life ;
in Cambridge ,
for a term of years ;
and his office is honorary ,
the chief duties of it devolving on the vice chancellor .
{
Chancellor of the exchequer },
a member of the British cabinet upon whom devolves the charge of the public income and expenditure as the highest finance minister of the government .
{
Chancellor of the order of the Garter } (
or other military orders ),
an officer who seals the commissions and mandates of the chapter and assembly of the knights ,
keeps the register of their proceedings ,
and delivers their acts under the seal of their order .
{
Lord high chancellor of England },
the presiding judge in the court of chancery ,
the highest judicial officer of the crown ,
and the first lay person of the state after the blood royal .
He is created chancellor by the delivery into his custody of the great seal ,
of which he becomes keeper .
He is privy counselor by his office ,
and prolocutor of the House of Lords by prescription .
[
1913 Webster ]
121 Moby Thesaurus words for "
chancellor ":
JA ,
academic dean ,
administration ,
administrator ,
alderman ,
ambassador ,
ambassadress ,
amicus curiae ,
apostolic delegate ,
archon ,
assessor ,
attache ,
bailie ,
barmaster ,
burghermaster ,
burgomaster ,
cabinet member ,
cabinet minister ,
career diplomat ,
charge ,
chief executive ,
chief executive officer ,
chief of state ,
circuit judge ,
city councilman ,
city father ,
city manager ,
commercial attache ,
commissar ,
commissioner ,
consul ,
consul general ,
consular agent ,
councillor ,
councilman ,
councilwoman ,
county commissioner ,
county supervisor ,
dean ,
dean of men ,
dean of women ,
dewan ,
diplomat ,
diplomatic ,
diplomatic agent ,
diplomatist ,
doge ,
elder ,
emissary ,
envoy ,
envoy extraordinary ,
executive ,
executive director ,
executive officer ,
executive secretary ,
foreign service officer ,
grand vizier ,
head of state ,
headman ,
headmaster ,
headmistress ,
induna ,
internuncio ,
judge advocate ,
judge ordinary ,
jurat ,
justice in eyre ,
justice of assize ,
lay judge ,
legal assessor ,
legate ,
legislator ,
lord mayor ,
magistrate ,
maire ,
management ,
managing director ,
master ,
mayor ,
military attache ,
military judge ,
minister ,
minister of state ,
minister plenipotentiary ,
minister resident ,
nuncio ,
officer ,
official ,
ombudsman ,
ordinary ,
plenipotentiary ,
police judge ,
portreeve ,
prefect ,
premier ,
president ,
presiding judge ,
prexy ,
prime minister ,
principal ,
probate judge ,
provost ,
puisne judge ,
recorder ,
rector ,
reeve ,
resident ,
secretary ,
secretary of legation ,
secretary of state ,
selectman ,
supervisor ,
syndic ,
the administration ,
treasurer ,
undersecretary ,
vice -
chancellor ,
vice -
consul ,
vice -
legate ,
vice -
president ,
warden Chancellor one who has judicial authority ,
literally ,
a "
lord of judgement ;"
a title given to the Persian governor of Samaria (
Ezra 4 :
8 ,
9 ,
17 ).
CHANCELLOR .
An officer appointed to preside over a court of chancery ,
invested with various powers in the several states .
2 .
The office of chancellor is of Roman origin .
He appears ,
at first ,
to have been a chief scribe or secretary ,
but he was afterwards invested with judicial power ,
and had superintendence over the other officers of the empire .
From the Romans ,
the title and office passed to the church ,
and therefore every bishop of the catholic church has ,
to this day ,
his chancellor ,
the principal judge of his consistory .
When the modern kingdoms of Europe were established upon the ruins of the empire ,
almost every state preserved its chancellor ,
with different jurisdictions and dignities ,
according to their different constitutions .
In all he seems to have had a supervision of all charters ,
letters ,
and such other public instruments of the crown ,
as were authenticated in the most solemn manner ;
and when seals came into use ,
he had the custody of the public seal .
3 .
An officer bearing this title is to be found in most countries of Europe ,
and is generally invested with extensive authority .
The title and office of chancellor came to us from England .
Many of our state constitutions provide for the appointment of this officer ,
who is by them ,
and by the law of the several states ,
invested with power as they provide .
Vide Encyclopedie ,
b .
t .;
Encycl ..
Amer .
h .
t .;
Dict .
de Jur .
h .
t .;
Merl .
Rep .
h .
t .;
4 Vin .
Ab .
374 ;
Blake '
s Ch .
Index ,
h .
t .;
Woodes .
Lect .
95 .
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Chancellor - Wikipedia When the term chancellor is used in British politics, it almost always refers to the chancellor of the exchequer As Second Lord of the Treasury, the chancellor has an official residence at 11 Downing Street, next door to the prime minister, at 10 Downing Street, in London
Chancellor(英语单词)_百度百科 German Chancellor Otto Von Bismarck may be most famous for his military and diplomatic talent, but his legacy includes many of today's social insurance programs
CHANCELLOR中文 (简体)翻译:剑桥词典 The German chancellor, Gerhard Schroeder, arrived for talks at Downing Street today If he is appointed to the post of university chancellor, his role will be mainly ceremonial
CHANCELLOR Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster The meaning of CHANCELLOR is the secretary of a nobleman, prince, or king How to use chancellor in a sentence
chancellor是什么意思_chancellor的翻译_音标_读音_用法_例句_爱词霸在线词典 On first hearing, this was the socially concerned chancellor, trying to change lives for the better, complete with "reforms" to an obviously indulgent system that demands too little effort from the newly unemployed to find work, and subsidises laziness
“总理”不都是Prime Minister,还有Chancellor - 知乎 进入英语后,拼写衍变为chancellor,起初指“国王的秘书”,后来衍变为“大臣,总理,首相,司法官,大学校长”等。 据说cancel也是从cancellus衍变来的。
Chancellor - New York City Public Schools A veteran educator with more than two decades of experience and an NYCPS parent himself, Chancellor Samuels has devoted his career to advancing student achievement, strengthening instructional practice, and building schools that are safe, academically rigorous, and truly integrated
chancellor 的意思和词源 - etymonline chancellor 的词源 chancellor (n ) 12世纪初, chaunceler,意为“统治者的首席行政官”,源自古法语 chancelier (12世纪),再往前追溯到晚期拉丁语 cancellarius,意思是“守护屏障的人,秘书,法庭的传令官”。
Chancellor State College Chancellor State College offers a range of programs that challenge students to be the best they can be Our Junior Secondary model enables students to engage in diverse learning opportunities across 4 Academies of Excellence: Creative Industries, STEM, Global Citizens and Health and Performance
大学中的Chancellor和Vice-chancellor翻译为“校长”和“副校长”? Chancellor在英国,澳大利亚、新西兰等国家表示“荣誉校长”,也可称作“校监”,作为一所大学的最高领导人,校监参与学校治理,但并不是真正处理学校实际事务的“校长”。