chairmanship

[ US /ˈtʃɛɹmənˌʃɪp/ ]
[ UK /t‍ʃˈe‍əmənʃˌɪp/ ]
NOUN
  1. the position of chairman
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How To Use chairmanship In A Sentence

  • Chancellor George Osborne took the further precaution of handing the chairmanship of the ICB to Sir John Vickers, an establishment insider regarded as a safe pair of hands, while appointing Treasury high-flier Sam Woods as Secretary with a brief to ensure the ICB sticks to its remit. Why So Nervous About the ICB's Report?
  • The gentlemanly proprietorships and relaxed chairmanships that historically supplied a large bulk of presidents have become rarities.
  • In 1973, he ran for the chairmanship of the College Republicans organization.
  • When democracy returned, the chairmanship was used to reward political services and to advance careers.
  • Why doesn't Harry Reid tell this extortioner to vote for the bill or lose his Chairmanship. Lieberman: I'll back health care bill without Medicare expansion
  • Suspicion has shadowed him ever since he gave up the chairmanship of his family's supermarket chain and took his government post in 1998, collecting a peerage along the way.
  • Indeed, she complained so much that she was able to finagle the chairmanship (sorry, the chairpersonship) of a committee tasked with finding discrimination at MIT.
  • Or does he feel the need for a spell of executive experience before clinching a plum chairmanship somewhere else? Times, Sunday Times
  • He had the opportunity to take the chairmanship of the all-powerful Urban Strategy and Governance committee.
  • His move to the chairmanship means he will take a less active role in day-to-day man-agement.
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