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incumbency

[ US /ˌɪnˈkəmbənsi/ ]
[ UK /ɪnkˈʌmbənsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. the term during which some position is held
  2. a duty that is incumbent upon you
  3. the office of an incumbent

How To Use incumbency In A Sentence

  • In her aluminum cast patio amal incumbency the promulgation of a tower hymenogastrales with the lama and unfilmed schinus of astylar. Rational Review
  • Some analysts argue that Delhi being a diarchy, the anti-incumbency factor was deflected from the state to the Centre.
  • One of the regrets of my incumbency, probably, should be that I have not given as much comfort and succour as I could have done, to all the local hostelries, taverns, or pubs.
  • He also said that Air India which was incurring losses for the past five years has started earning profit during his incumbency.
  • We have also said that they have had to be good corporate citizens during their incumbency.
  • This style served the party badly in the last years of its incumbency and especially in opposition.
  • Look at the number of corporations that have made the CSO job an automatic incumbency for one agency or another.
  • Although governments with minority support have regularly clung to power through the advantages of incumbency in marginal seats, Australian political scientists have paid little attention to the question of legitimacy.
  • This should be combined with addressing challenges of accountability and dispassionately managing the negative effects of incumbency such as careerism, competition for status, corruption and so on. Contextual considerations in addressing challenges of leadership
  • Presidential incumbency was used to attract media attention to the presidential candidate.
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