honcho

[ US /ˈhɔntʃoʊ/ ]
[ UK /hˈɒnt‍ʃə‍ʊ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person who exercises control over workers
    if you want to leave early you have to ask the foreman
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How To Use honcho In A Sentence

  • Tlatoani (head honcho), cacique, and caudillo - these words glisten on the pages of the derisive gubernatorial lexicon.
  • This is not a dry catalogue of facts, a laundry list of achievements by successive corporate honchos or a linear record of the changes in or the restoration of this heritage hotel property.
  • You'll have no choice but to communicate and interact with co-workers, customers and head honchos.
  • Chris did an entirely admirable job for years organizing, promoting, growing and honchoing the event! Undefined
  • I think [the soundtrack] is going to do better than most because the Taylor engine is so powerful," label honcho Jason Linn says. E! Online (US) - Top Stories
  • Pehr Gyllenhammar, the Volvo group's head honcho, is a rare show visitor.
  • As the project leader and principal investigator, it was one of my responsibilities to honcho the selection of a name.
  • Air Force Honcho enjoyed plenty of luck in running last week after being baulked early on and may not enjoy a trouble free passage either this time.
  • Xtreme Systems honcho Charles 'Fugger' Wirth teamed up with Corsair, Gigabyte and Intel to break the 3DMark05 world record, stealing it back from Bit-tech.net Feed
  • After praising Brown ( "Brownie, you're doing a heck of job"), Bush last week removed him from honchoing the Katrina relief operation. How Bush Blew It
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