释义 |
Definition of executive in English: executiveadjective ɛɡˈzɛkjʊtɪvɪɡˈzɛkjʊtɪvɪɡˈzɛkjədɪv 1attributive Relating to or having the power to put plans or actions into effect. 管理的;执行的;实施的 执行主席。 执行权。 Example sentencesExamples - He was a full-time executive chairman and permanent secretary.
- Ms. Torres, who was formerly executive chef at Rocking Horse, cooks in a similarly dramatic style.
- Managers make key executive decisions about the running of companies and they are answerable to a board of directors.
- Stern is now executive vice president of business development.
- With Vasquez as executive producer, the series premiered in March 2001 on Nickelodeon.
- He is hinting that he will step back from executive duties and allow other managers to run the show.
- Now executive chairman of technology firm Connect Global Solutions, he is on the other side of the fence.
- The appointment of the former executive chairman of Aggreko, the power generator rentals company, was well received by analysts.
- He has donned varied roles such as executive producer, playwright and screen writer.
- In 1999, several veteran senior managers left, including Martin Neath, formerly executive vice president.
- Neugebauer continued as editor of Mathematical Reviews until 1945 when a full-time executive editor was appointed.
- The new chairman John Brady said that all matters would be considered and worked on by the new executive committee.
- He also serves as executive producer, while Tom Cruise is listed among the producers.
- The new executive committee has, unlike the old, a majority of his supporters.
- The younger officer turned sharply on his heel to lead the new executive officer from the shuttle bay.
- Currently, the representatives receive a monthly stipend of $400, while executive officers earn $1,250 per month.
- Feller became the first executive editor of Mathematical Reviews which was set up at this time.
- EasyJet founder and former executive chairman Stelios Haji-Ioannou planned the acquisition to rapidly grow the airline.
- He is now executive chef at the five-star Outrigger Fiji, running five restaurants and a kitchen team of 75.
- A number of people were unhappy that the executive board got powers which were previously the province of the general committee.
Synonyms administrative, decision-making, directorial, directing, controlling, managerial law-making, regulating professional, white-collar - 1.1 Denoting or relating to the part of a political administration with responsibility for putting into effect laws drawn up by the legislature.
the executive branch of government 政府行政部门。 Often contrasted with legislative Example sentencesExamples - During that period fifteen different and greatly distinguished citizens have, in succession, administered the executive branch of the government.
- The new ministers left contradictory feelings behind them after their first public appearances as representatives of the executive power.
- But with few executive powers proposed for the assemblies, the Deputy PM has been accused by the Tories of offering little more than expensive talking shops.
- South Korea's government has an elected legislature and a strong executive branch.
- In the coming months and years, the locus of political struggle will lie between the executive branch and the legislature.
- There are also significant structural impediments to presidential control of the executive branch of government.
- The result was a federal government in which Republicans control both the executive and legislative branches.
- The EU does not have separate legislative and executive branches to speak of.
- He accepted that his plan for control orders was a substantial increase in the executive powers of the state.
- It would involve a flagrantly illegal and unconstitutional intervention by the executive branch into the affairs of the legislature.
- In general, the government's ability to conduct surveillance on Americans has been expanded, and checks and balances on executive power have been reduced.
- It is a disgrace in political terms, because it calls into contempt the very idea of political and executive accountability.
- The adoption of a budget is the principal means by which Congress holds the executive branch to account.
- At such a time, the attempt to apportion blame and responsibility between the political and executive levels of government becomes artificial and obsolete.
- The company now faces antitrust investigation by the European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union.
- From the Council of State is chosen the Council of Ministers, who have direct administrative responsibility for the executive departments.
- The Cabinet and its members fuse political and executive functions.
- Hayes asserted executive power through his appointments and in general upheld the authority of the presidency.
- The new cabinet, though it lacks experience of executive power, has obviously learned the old knacks of governing.
- The executive responsibility lies with him, and with his relevant offices.
noun ɛɡˈzɛkjʊtɪvɪɡˈzɛkjʊtɪvɪɡˈzɛkjədɪv 1A person with senior managerial responsibility in a business. 高级管理人员;执行官;主管 工会执行委员会。 Example sentencesExamples - Ultimately the power to take action resides with senior managers and particularly the chief executive.
- A noted local business executive with significant retail responsibility once told me that he does not exhibit.
- He must be the only chief executive of a public limited company in Ireland to sit in open plan space.
- Investigators staged dawn raids on the homes and offices of senior executives.
- If you're the chief executive or managing director of a small or medium-sized company, have you asked your IT guy this specific question?
- Trafford council has now appointed an interim chief executive.
- Did the chief executive ask the senior manager whether such cash payments had been received?
- According to one industry marketing executive, several people said that they weren't going to attend both shows.
- A senior pharmaceutical company executive says estimates of the prevalence of diseases are often exaggerated.
- Usually you will need to get access through top management/senior executives.
- Cliff's experiences are echoed by the wife of a former senior executive at a hi-tech firm.
- Upon completion, trainees are relocated based on business needs and become either account executives or operation managers.
- Lord Marshall, the airline's chairman, will be acting chief executive until a successor is found.
- In my case, as a professional, my mothering instincts overcame my desire to become a high-flying business executive.
- Every once in a while, top corporate executives are actually made to pay for doing something not so smart.
- As a customer, you know more about the way many businesses work than the executives and managers running them.
- Look at the structure of the typical senior executive's share option scheme.
- As for Dudley, the 33-year-old is an executive with Artistic Control Management.
- Her first job will be to appoint a chief executive of the trust.
- He should hold junk food and advertising executives accountable for their role in promoting obesity and disease throughout the globe.
Synonyms chief, head, principal, senior official, senior manager, senior administrator director, managing director, MD, CEO, chief executive officer, president, chairman, chairwoman, controller British director general informal boss, boss man, top dog, bigwig, big wheel, big Daddy, big Chief, exec, suit British informal guv'nor North American informal numero uno, Mister Big, (head) honcho, big kahuna, big white chief, sachem, padrone derogatory fat cat - 1.1as modifier Suitable for a senior business executive.
适合于高级管理人员的,供高级管理人员使用的 高级管理人员住所。 Example sentencesExamples - Further work will include a refurbished lecture theatre and new executive suite.
- Eighteen executive bedroom suites have been included ready for this new year.
- There's not much similarity in the systems required to run say an executive pension plan and a retail with-profits bond.
- A new business executive aviation terminal will be built offering first class facilities for business and general aviation.
- He argued that yes, executive salaries are exorbitant but you have to pay what someone would get in America, otherwise you're not going to get them or keep them.
- Black had two executive jets to whisk him to homes and hotels in New York, Toronto, Tel Aviv or Palm Beach.
- His Gulfstream executive jet keeps it company in the parking lot at his house.
- The company announced a plan to limit executive severance pay.
- And it is this figure that should provide the link between business performance and executive compensation.
- A millionaire who failed to save a wallpaper factory is planning to build an executive housing estate on the site.
- Plans for apartments, executive homes and a woodland visitor centre have been put forward by developers.
- Having been pushed so far back as to be deprived of his place in the company's executive suite, he vowed to return to his entrepreneurial roots.
- It was February, and I'd driven from Derbyshire down to Heathrow to catch the IBM executive jet.
- Instead, because of the financial plight of the club after relegation, Mr Tueart was allowed by the ex-chairman to use an executive box.
- The Pentagon will lease six Gulfstream V executive jets so the big shots can fly high.
- Within hours of the court's announcement, the child was on a Lear executive jet back to Cuba with his father, who lives there.
- A few women have pushed their way into the boardrooms and executive suites of big companies.
- It is planning to buy an executive box for next season which it would use to host guests from businesses and schools and showcase what the club has to offer.
- And most would start to prepare by polishing up their CV and renewing their contacts with executive recruitment companies.
- This cult of violent revolution is not limited to creative types; it reaches into avant-garde executive suites.
- 1.2 An executive committee or other body within an organization.
执行委员会;执行机构 工会执行委员会。 Example sentencesExamples - The education and library service scrutiny committee has urged the executive to scrap the idea as a waste of resources.
- Mr Brown, who has been suspended from his job of general secretary, said he would defend all the charges put to him by the executive of the union.
- The union executive meets today ahead of a recalled national conference in Brighton next week which could endorse fresh walkouts.
- The union's executive decided this week to delay calling strikes until after further meetings with the companies on Friday.
- A left wing national executive have just been elected to run the union.
- But he added that there was still ‘some distance’ from any proposed deal he could recommend to his union executive.
- At one university, the top facility executive is on good terms with top managers and with deans.
- It is thought likely that the council will consider the matter through one of its scrutiny committees or through its executive.
- This final provocation let the central executive to proscribe the committee on 21 September 1956.
- This is Cllr Lacey's first time on the executive, a body which is charged with the administration of all aspects of party business.
- The plans, including financial and legal aspects, will be put before the council's ruling executive on Tuesday.
- Previously the Labour manifesto was agreed solely by the national executive and parliamentary committee.
- The union executive spent the weekend consulting local officials and individual firemen and women to gauge their mood.
- The county executive meets within the week to consider the situation, with power to make a nomination of its own.
- St Angela's College has a union executive of six elected members who work part-time, and don't get paid, unlike other institutes.
- Far-Left NUT members will tomorrow try to commit their executive to urging other teacher unions to ballot their members on a boycott.
- Public unity within the DUP executive is holding - but only by a fingernail.
- The managing directors of the subsidiary organizations felt that the management executive would never see it their way, and would continue to cut their budgets.
- True, he served on the executive of the 1922 committee until the election and has voted consistently against the extension of gay rights.
- She also paid tribute to everyone who contributed to the day to day running of the club, the executive, committee, trainers, parents and players.
Synonyms administration, leadership, management, directorate, directors government, legislative body informal top brass
2the executiveThe branch of a government responsible for putting decisions or laws into effect. 行政部门 Example sentencesExamples - It has been accused on several occasions of trying to become a kind of shadow cabinet that would influence the decisions of the executive.
- Of course, a handful of formal consultative processes will not democratize policy formation within the executive.
- It will simply be the Minister and the executive by Order in Council, and I am concerned about that.
- The data is extremely thin, and there's generally too many things going on to isolate the effect of the executive.
- The Government, the executive, is meant to bring a bill to the Parliament.
- Splitting the executive between a weak president and a prime minister has a better chance of sustaining democracy in the country.
- With the official Opposition almost impotent, the country needs strong, Labour-led committees to keep the executive to account.
- This is a legitimate dispute between the executive and the legislative branch of government.
- The point is that he is a member of the executive - a Cabinet Minister - and he is bound by collective responsibility.
- For example, responsible government requires that the executive be responsible to parliament.
- One reliable political insider said he fully expected the executive to collapse within days but that it was going to happen anyway in January.
- Judges hardly interfered with decisions of the executive, and the judiciary and the government had a cozy relationship.
- It reviews the decision of the executive to see if it was permitted by law - in this instance the Human Rights Act.
- The Scottish executive said it remained committed to the policy.
- They can also make submissions on the operations of the executive through these parliamentary committees.
- It is a federalist constitution which recognizes three branches of government: the executive, legislative, and judicial.
- There is more to a healthy economy and democracy than purging the executive, the legislature and local councils and governments every electoral cycle.
- We are taught that there are three arms of government - the executive, the legislature and the judiciary - but it is useful to remember a fourth.
- The basic objection to the form of pre-charter borough governments was that the executive was responsible to the king rather than to the community.
- If we look at what this bill is to do, we see that it will allow by Order in Council the executive to make the decisions about merging.
Derivativesadverb The film will be executively produced by Hilary Heath with a script by Martin Sherman. Example sentencesExamples - The film, executively produced by Ansa and directed by her husband Jonee Ansa, is currently shooting in and around Macon.
- It asserted that the decision of the House of Lords in Venables was in relation to executively set tariffs, and could not be read across to judicially set tariffs.
OriginLate Middle English: from medieval Latin executivus, from exsequi (see execute). Definition of executive in US English: executiveadjectiveiɡˈzekyədivɪɡˈzɛkjədɪv 1attributive Having the power to put plans, actions, or laws into effect. 管理的;执行的;实施的 执行主席。 执行权。 Example sentencesExamples - In 1999, several veteran senior managers left, including Martin Neath, formerly executive vice president.
- A number of people were unhappy that the executive board got powers which were previously the province of the general committee.
- Ms. Torres, who was formerly executive chef at Rocking Horse, cooks in a similarly dramatic style.
- The younger officer turned sharply on his heel to lead the new executive officer from the shuttle bay.
- Stern is now executive vice president of business development.
- He is hinting that he will step back from executive duties and allow other managers to run the show.
- Neugebauer continued as editor of Mathematical Reviews until 1945 when a full-time executive editor was appointed.
- The new executive committee has, unlike the old, a majority of his supporters.
- Managers make key executive decisions about the running of companies and they are answerable to a board of directors.
- EasyJet founder and former executive chairman Stelios Haji-Ioannou planned the acquisition to rapidly grow the airline.
- With Vasquez as executive producer, the series premiered in March 2001 on Nickelodeon.
- Feller became the first executive editor of Mathematical Reviews which was set up at this time.
- He was a full-time executive chairman and permanent secretary.
- The appointment of the former executive chairman of Aggreko, the power generator rentals company, was well received by analysts.
- The new chairman John Brady said that all matters would be considered and worked on by the new executive committee.
- Currently, the representatives receive a monthly stipend of $400, while executive officers earn $1,250 per month.
- He also serves as executive producer, while Tom Cruise is listed among the producers.
- He is now executive chef at the five-star Outrigger Fiji, running five restaurants and a kitchen team of 75.
- He has donned varied roles such as executive producer, playwright and screen writer.
- Now executive chairman of technology firm Connect Global Solutions, he is on the other side of the fence.
Synonyms administrative, decision-making, directorial, directing, controlling, managerial - 1.1 Relating to managing an organization or political administration and putting into effect plans, policies, or laws.
行政(上)的 the executive branch of government 政府行政部门。 Often contrasted with legislative the state has various executive functions 该州有各种行政职能。常与LEGISLATIVE 相对。 Example sentencesExamples - During that period fifteen different and greatly distinguished citizens have, in succession, administered the executive branch of the government.
- There are also significant structural impediments to presidential control of the executive branch of government.
- The adoption of a budget is the principal means by which Congress holds the executive branch to account.
- But with few executive powers proposed for the assemblies, the Deputy PM has been accused by the Tories of offering little more than expensive talking shops.
- In general, the government's ability to conduct surveillance on Americans has been expanded, and checks and balances on executive power have been reduced.
- It is a disgrace in political terms, because it calls into contempt the very idea of political and executive accountability.
- The Cabinet and its members fuse political and executive functions.
- From the Council of State is chosen the Council of Ministers, who have direct administrative responsibility for the executive departments.
- The new cabinet, though it lacks experience of executive power, has obviously learned the old knacks of governing.
- The result was a federal government in which Republicans control both the executive and legislative branches.
- He accepted that his plan for control orders was a substantial increase in the executive powers of the state.
- The company now faces antitrust investigation by the European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union.
- The new ministers left contradictory feelings behind them after their first public appearances as representatives of the executive power.
- In the coming months and years, the locus of political struggle will lie between the executive branch and the legislature.
- The EU does not have separate legislative and executive branches to speak of.
- The executive responsibility lies with him, and with his relevant offices.
- At such a time, the attempt to apportion blame and responsibility between the political and executive levels of government becomes artificial and obsolete.
- It would involve a flagrantly illegal and unconstitutional intervention by the executive branch into the affairs of the legislature.
- South Korea's government has an elected legislature and a strong executive branch.
- Hayes asserted executive power through his appointments and in general upheld the authority of the presidency.
nouniɡˈzekyədivɪɡˈzɛkjədɪv 1A person with senior managerial responsibility in a business organization. 高级管理人员;执行官;主管 Example sentencesExamples - Lord Marshall, the airline's chairman, will be acting chief executive until a successor is found.
- As for Dudley, the 33-year-old is an executive with Artistic Control Management.
- Every once in a while, top corporate executives are actually made to pay for doing something not so smart.
- Look at the structure of the typical senior executive's share option scheme.
- Upon completion, trainees are relocated based on business needs and become either account executives or operation managers.
- Trafford council has now appointed an interim chief executive.
- A noted local business executive with significant retail responsibility once told me that he does not exhibit.
- Cliff's experiences are echoed by the wife of a former senior executive at a hi-tech firm.
- If you're the chief executive or managing director of a small or medium-sized company, have you asked your IT guy this specific question?
- He must be the only chief executive of a public limited company in Ireland to sit in open plan space.
- Did the chief executive ask the senior manager whether such cash payments had been received?
- Her first job will be to appoint a chief executive of the trust.
- He should hold junk food and advertising executives accountable for their role in promoting obesity and disease throughout the globe.
- In my case, as a professional, my mothering instincts overcame my desire to become a high-flying business executive.
- Ultimately the power to take action resides with senior managers and particularly the chief executive.
- Investigators staged dawn raids on the homes and offices of senior executives.
- A senior pharmaceutical company executive says estimates of the prevalence of diseases are often exaggerated.
- As a customer, you know more about the way many businesses work than the executives and managers running them.
- According to one industry marketing executive, several people said that they weren't going to attend both shows.
- Usually you will need to get access through top management/senior executives.
Synonyms chief, head, principal, senior official, senior manager, senior administrator - 1.1as modifier Suitable or appropriate for a senior business executive.
适合于高级管理人员的,供高级管理人员使用的 高级管理人员住所。 Example sentencesExamples - Within hours of the court's announcement, the child was on a Lear executive jet back to Cuba with his father, who lives there.
- Eighteen executive bedroom suites have been included ready for this new year.
- Having been pushed so far back as to be deprived of his place in the company's executive suite, he vowed to return to his entrepreneurial roots.
- And most would start to prepare by polishing up their CV and renewing their contacts with executive recruitment companies.
- A millionaire who failed to save a wallpaper factory is planning to build an executive housing estate on the site.
- Instead, because of the financial plight of the club after relegation, Mr Tueart was allowed by the ex-chairman to use an executive box.
- A few women have pushed their way into the boardrooms and executive suites of big companies.
- Black had two executive jets to whisk him to homes and hotels in New York, Toronto, Tel Aviv or Palm Beach.
- It was February, and I'd driven from Derbyshire down to Heathrow to catch the IBM executive jet.
- It is planning to buy an executive box for next season which it would use to host guests from businesses and schools and showcase what the club has to offer.
- There's not much similarity in the systems required to run say an executive pension plan and a retail with-profits bond.
- He argued that yes, executive salaries are exorbitant but you have to pay what someone would get in America, otherwise you're not going to get them or keep them.
- His Gulfstream executive jet keeps it company in the parking lot at his house.
- The company announced a plan to limit executive severance pay.
- And it is this figure that should provide the link between business performance and executive compensation.
- This cult of violent revolution is not limited to creative types; it reaches into avant-garde executive suites.
- Further work will include a refurbished lecture theatre and new executive suite.
- The Pentagon will lease six Gulfstream V executive jets so the big shots can fly high.
- A new business executive aviation terminal will be built offering first class facilities for business and general aviation.
- Plans for apartments, executive homes and a woodland visitor centre have been put forward by developers.
- 1.2 An executive committee or other body within an organization.
执行委员会;执行机构 工会执行委员会。 Example sentencesExamples - Mr Brown, who has been suspended from his job of general secretary, said he would defend all the charges put to him by the executive of the union.
- A left wing national executive have just been elected to run the union.
- It is thought likely that the council will consider the matter through one of its scrutiny committees or through its executive.
- True, he served on the executive of the 1922 committee until the election and has voted consistently against the extension of gay rights.
- The union executive meets today ahead of a recalled national conference in Brighton next week which could endorse fresh walkouts.
- The plans, including financial and legal aspects, will be put before the council's ruling executive on Tuesday.
- Previously the Labour manifesto was agreed solely by the national executive and parliamentary committee.
- St Angela's College has a union executive of six elected members who work part-time, and don't get paid, unlike other institutes.
- Public unity within the DUP executive is holding - but only by a fingernail.
- At one university, the top facility executive is on good terms with top managers and with deans.
- The education and library service scrutiny committee has urged the executive to scrap the idea as a waste of resources.
- The managing directors of the subsidiary organizations felt that the management executive would never see it their way, and would continue to cut their budgets.
- Far-Left NUT members will tomorrow try to commit their executive to urging other teacher unions to ballot their members on a boycott.
- The union's executive decided this week to delay calling strikes until after further meetings with the companies on Friday.
- But he added that there was still ‘some distance’ from any proposed deal he could recommend to his union executive.
- This is Cllr Lacey's first time on the executive, a body which is charged with the administration of all aspects of party business.
- The county executive meets within the week to consider the situation, with power to make a nomination of its own.
- She also paid tribute to everyone who contributed to the day to day running of the club, the executive, committee, trainers, parents and players.
- This final provocation let the central executive to proscribe the committee on 21 September 1956.
- The union executive spent the weekend consulting local officials and individual firemen and women to gauge their mood.
Synonyms administration, leadership, management, directorate, directors
2the executiveThe person or branch of a government responsible for putting policies or laws into effect. 行政部门 Example sentencesExamples - Judges hardly interfered with decisions of the executive, and the judiciary and the government had a cozy relationship.
- Of course, a handful of formal consultative processes will not democratize policy formation within the executive.
- One reliable political insider said he fully expected the executive to collapse within days but that it was going to happen anyway in January.
- It reviews the decision of the executive to see if it was permitted by law - in this instance the Human Rights Act.
- It has been accused on several occasions of trying to become a kind of shadow cabinet that would influence the decisions of the executive.
- The Government, the executive, is meant to bring a bill to the Parliament.
- The basic objection to the form of pre-charter borough governments was that the executive was responsible to the king rather than to the community.
- We are taught that there are three arms of government - the executive, the legislature and the judiciary - but it is useful to remember a fourth.
- The point is that he is a member of the executive - a Cabinet Minister - and he is bound by collective responsibility.
- They can also make submissions on the operations of the executive through these parliamentary committees.
- For example, responsible government requires that the executive be responsible to parliament.
- This is a legitimate dispute between the executive and the legislative branch of government.
- The Scottish executive said it remained committed to the policy.
- The data is extremely thin, and there's generally too many things going on to isolate the effect of the executive.
- If we look at what this bill is to do, we see that it will allow by Order in Council the executive to make the decisions about merging.
- It will simply be the Minister and the executive by Order in Council, and I am concerned about that.
- It is a federalist constitution which recognizes three branches of government: the executive, legislative, and judicial.
- With the official Opposition almost impotent, the country needs strong, Labour-led committees to keep the executive to account.
- Splitting the executive between a weak president and a prime minister has a better chance of sustaining democracy in the country.
- There is more to a healthy economy and democracy than purging the executive, the legislature and local councils and governments every electoral cycle.
OriginLate Middle English: from medieval Latin executivus, from exsequi (see execute). |