Chief Executive

NOUN
  1. the person who holds the office of head of state of the United States government
    the President likes to jog every morning
  2. the office of the United States head of state
    a President is elected every four years
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How To Use Chief Executive In A Sentence

  • No, just stylish, insists G.O.D. founder and chief executive Douglas Young.
  • One chief executive had to talk to 62 different people to change a cancer treatment protocol. Times, Sunday Times
  • That's what Dan Kim, chief executive of Red Mango Inc., a frozen yogurt franchise in Dallas, did while trying to name the flavors of his frozen yogurt and iced tea drinks.
  • He announced his retirement as chief executive of the company.
  • It's likely the two sides had trouble seeing eye-to-eye on long-term potash prices, and decided to instead negotiate smaller shipments over shorter time frames, said Ravi Sood, chief executive officer of Lawrence Asset Management in Toronto. Market News
  • Andy Anson, 2018's chief executive, is described as assiduous about keeping the board informed. Football news, match reports and fixtures | guardian.co.uk
  • Even as home prices continued to fall industrywide and the number of new houses under construction kept sinking, Paul Saville , the chief executive of NVR Inc., received total 2010 compensation valued at nearly $31 million, according to NVR's proxy statement. NVR Pays Top Dollar
  • The United States is one of the few democracies that does not allow its citizens to elect their national chief executive directly.
  • There are only a handful of entrepreneurs who doted on Steve Jobs as publicly as Masayoshi Son , the founder and chief executive of Japan's Internet and mobile carrier Softbank Corp. In the last few years, Mr. Son has compared the late Apple CEO to Leonardo da Vinci and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, while labeling him a "genius" and a "god. Softbank Founder Masayoshi Son: The 'Next Steve Jobs'?
  • In short, our forty-fourth chief executive sought to end America's two-and-a-third centuries as a truly exceptional nation-more patriotic, more dynamic, more enterprising and freer than any other-to turn the republic into a kind of enervated satellite of Western Europe. Forbes.com: News
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