[
US
/ˈnɑməˌneɪt, ˈnɑmənət/
]
[ UK /nˈɒmɪnˌeɪt/ ]
[ UK /nˈɒmɪnˌeɪt/ ]
VERB
-
charge with a function; charge to be
She was made president of the club
She was named Head of the Committee -
create and charge with a task or function
nominate a committee - propose as a candidate for some honor
-
put forward; nominate for appointment to an office or for an honor or position
The President nominated her as head of the Civil Rights Commission
How To Use nominate In A Sentence
- They contended that many foreign central banks were willing to absorb all the foreign currency earned by their exporting sectors that was not willingly held by their private sector in US dollar denominated assets.
- He can dissolve the parliament, and nominate people to all the key state functions.
- I will not accept if nominated, and will serve if selected.
- I will not accept if nominated, and will serve if selected.
- Artists should be nominated for an overall appreciation of their work to date, of which we should be shown the finest examples.
- His reward for services rendered is to have been nominated as the new British ambassador to the US.
- Perot claims he is serving as a stand-in for whomever the Reform Party nominates at its Labor Day convention.
- More than 500 trade exhibitors took part in the exhibition, and 32 stands were nominated for the award.
- Link when is Obama going to nominate a radical muslim to his cabinet … we need more diversity. — fj Richardson Is Back, Beardless and Ready - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
- And the action, therefore, which Pliny denominated obstinacy, would, if it had been left to us to name it, have been called inflexible virtue, as arising out of a sense of the obligations imposed upon them by the Christian religion. A Portraiture of Quakerism, Volume 3