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 chancellor ['tʃænsəlɚ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 大臣, 总理, 首相, 大使馆/领事馆的一等秘书, 司法官, 大学校长

  1. The most important judge in Britain is the Lord Chancellor.
    英国最重要的法官是大法官。
  2. The chancellor is the most powerful man in the Austrian government.
    首相是奥地利政府最有实权的人。
  3. The Chancellor of the Exchequer is the minister in charge of finance in Britain.
    英国财政大臣是负责财政的大臣。


chancellor
[ noun ]
  1. the British cabinet minister responsible for finance

  2. <noun.person>
  3. the person who is head of state (in several countries)

  4. <noun.person>
  5. the honorary or titular head of a university

  6. <noun.person>


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.

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.

{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.

  1. Back in the March Budget, Mr Norman Lamont, then chancellor, forecast a PSBR of Pounds 50bn (Dollars 74.5bn) for 1993-94. Eight months into the financial year, the Bank has completed about Pounds 43bn of gilt funding.
  2. That the chancellor announces something which has long been known is barely worth reporting.
  3. The West German chancellor, on a three-day visit to Washington, also told Shultz that Bonn would accept modernization of short-range missiles, but that it first wanted NATO to chart a comprehensive arms-control strategy.
  4. Konrad Adenauer was only a year younger when he became West German chancellor in 1949, and Ronald Reagan was four years older when he left office in 1989.
  5. I shall look at some of the options next week. The author is former director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies and was a special adviser to the former chancellor, Mr Norman Lamont.
  6. Mr Heseltine had been drafted in to answer Mr Smith because Mr Norman Lamont, the chancellor, was giving evidence to the Treasury committee. Mr Smith used his opening speech to review the government's pledges of an early economic upturn.
  7. But the chancellor cannot have it both ways.
  8. French president Francois Mitterrand and Helmut Kohl, the German chancellor (pictured below), are expected to discuss Gatt, the next European summit and the outlook for the EU after Maastricht.
  9. After the Danish No vote and the feeble French Yes, the chancellor clearly felt that his political beliefs and instincts had been vindicated. What still has to be vindicated is the chancellor's belief that the UK economy will recover from recession.
  10. After the Danish No vote and the feeble French Yes, the chancellor clearly felt that his political beliefs and instincts had been vindicated. What still has to be vindicated is the chancellor's belief that the UK economy will recover from recession.
  11. The West German chancellor will try everything he can to get elected president of a unified Germany in 1990.
  12. That was one of his great achievements as chancellor. Brandt attaches special importance to place.
  13. Although there are still a million more out of work than when Mr Major became chancellor, unemployment is falling.
  14. "The chancellor will endeavor to explain the West German position again in an atmosphere of trust and friendship," Klein said.
  15. New York City's schools chancellor is telling schools to consider getting rid of time clocks that many teachers cite as hated symbols of their lack of professional status.
  16. An assistant vice chancellor at Berkeley warned that "if we keep getting extremely well-prepared Asians, and we are, we may get to the point where whites will become an affirmative action group."
  17. Nevertheless, if Mr Norman Lamont, the chancellor, announces severe fiscal tightening measures tomorrow, the foreign exchanges may react badly in anticipation of further monetary easing.
  18. His oath was administered by Robert R. Livingston, chancellor of New York state and the Masonic grand master.
  19. She said that at the time she worked in the West German chancellor's office and she had to "overcome many scruples" in order to get herself to meet Thieme's requests.
  20. But because it is a charge on the owner, and not on the land, it will not show up in normal searches. The Law Commission recommended that the liability be repealed but the lord chancellor's department has still to decide if it will introduce legislation.
  21. Mr Smith and Mr Gordon Brown, the shadow chancellor, have plugged away on the theme of broken promises.
  22. HOUSING action group Shelter yesterday called on the chancellor to deliver a Budget for housing in November.
  23. The killings of the hostages, who included a vice chancellor at Kashmir University, were a departure from the militants' previous practices.
  24. He has sought to dampen interest rate speculation by stressing the need for a sustainable recovery with growth that is 'really going to happen for some years ahead'. But the chancellor is the man ultimately responsible for the radical changes of mood.
  25. PROPOSED changes to the intestacy laws announced by the lord chancellor, Lord Mackay, should be a powerful incentive to avoid dying without a will, or intestate.
  26. Given the tensions between the Bundesbank and Kohl, however, it would be surprising if the chancellor turned up to listen.
  27. The 'Regulator' allows the chancellor to vary indirect taxes at any time.
  28. In 1986 the Bar and the Law Society sought a judicial review of a refusal by Lord Hailsham, then lord chancellor, to award legal aid lawyers a 'fair and reasonable' pay rise.
  29. The lord chancellor has already taken five years to act on the Law Commission's main recommendations.
  30. The chancellor of the exchequer does it; industrial leaders do it; even striking signalmen do it.
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