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单词 syndic
释义

Definition of syndic in English:

syndic

noun ˈsɪndɪkˈsɪndɪk
  • 1A government official in various countries.

    (各国的)政府官员

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is true that these were the men whom communities normally nominated as syndics, local tax-collectors, or churchwardens.
    • The syndic of the Estates reported to Versailles in 1783 that parlementaires set a bad example, paying their taxes eighteenth months, and sometimes even two years late.
    • The contributions of each village household for the quartering, re-equipment of the cavalry, and public works at Corinth were decided by the village elders in consultation with the syndics of the comunita.
    • Some labor requirements, which had already been commuted into cash, were abolished, but the syndics increased the percentage of tithe taken to replace the lost revenue.
    • He was the syndic of the lessees of the royal salt marshes of Peccais, an integral part of the gabelle.
    • The council of syndics of the Kaliningrad naval assembly is actively cooperating with the Military Council, the commanders of the Baltic Fleet, organizations of war veterans.
    • Several villages contested the payment by taking their case to the parliament, and other villages followed suit by convoking general assemblies, naming syndics to represent their interests, and refusing to pay the full amount.
    • In many areas, the parish council and the official village assembly blurred together, and sometimes the churchwardens and syndics of the village were the same people.
    • Both of them pleaded with the Council for the substitution of a milder mode of death; but the syndics were inflexible.
    • Since the syndics of the comunita were responsible for allotting these obligations, however, they illegally exempted both the members of the comunita and the laborers on their land.
    • Fournier has noted that the syndics of the Estates sought to put an end to rulings of the Parlement of Toulouse on seigneurial rights.
    • He later moved to Delft, where he was well known and became a syndic of the Guild of Saint Luke.
    • Various rulings of the royal council, granted upon requests of the syndic of the Estates of the province, without hearing arguments to the contrary, have consolidated this plan progressively and insensibly.
    • It shows that ministers corresponded with the intendant, the military governor, executive agents of the Estates known as syndics, the archbishop of Narbonne, and occasionally the count of Polignac, first baron of the Estates.
  • 2(in the UK) a business agent of certain universities and corporations, especially a member of a senate committee at Cambridge University.

    (英国)大学(或公司)代理人(尤指剑桥大学评议会特别委员会的委员)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Cambridge took immediate control of its printing in 1698 and exercises it through a board of syndics.
    • There were elected councils or committees of syndics which supervised the clubs' daily routine, one of the syndics elected the bursar and the clerk.

Derivatives

  • syndical

  • adjective
    • The protest continue to be only syndical, not political, stated the leader of ‘Education’ syndicate in Pleven Boriana Genova.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In 1983 his father died and that hard blow forced him to leave his syndical charges for a two year lapse to entirely devote himself to the work of his family.
      • The condominium owners will elect some of their members who will meet as an unincorporated entity: the syndical council.

Origin

Early 17th century: from French, via late Latin from Greek sundikos, from sun- 'together' + dikē 'justice'.

Rhymes

Indic

Definition of syndic in US English:

syndic

nounˈsindikˈsɪndɪk
  • 1A government official in various countries.

    (各国的)政府官员

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In many areas, the parish council and the official village assembly blurred together, and sometimes the churchwardens and syndics of the village were the same people.
    • Some labor requirements, which had already been commuted into cash, were abolished, but the syndics increased the percentage of tithe taken to replace the lost revenue.
    • Several villages contested the payment by taking their case to the parliament, and other villages followed suit by convoking general assemblies, naming syndics to represent their interests, and refusing to pay the full amount.
    • Since the syndics of the comunita were responsible for allotting these obligations, however, they illegally exempted both the members of the comunita and the laborers on their land.
    • It is true that these were the men whom communities normally nominated as syndics, local tax-collectors, or churchwardens.
    • Fournier has noted that the syndics of the Estates sought to put an end to rulings of the Parlement of Toulouse on seigneurial rights.
    • It shows that ministers corresponded with the intendant, the military governor, executive agents of the Estates known as syndics, the archbishop of Narbonne, and occasionally the count of Polignac, first baron of the Estates.
    • The syndic of the Estates reported to Versailles in 1783 that parlementaires set a bad example, paying their taxes eighteenth months, and sometimes even two years late.
    • The council of syndics of the Kaliningrad naval assembly is actively cooperating with the Military Council, the commanders of the Baltic Fleet, organizations of war veterans.
    • He later moved to Delft, where he was well known and became a syndic of the Guild of Saint Luke.
    • Various rulings of the royal council, granted upon requests of the syndic of the Estates of the province, without hearing arguments to the contrary, have consolidated this plan progressively and insensibly.
    • Both of them pleaded with the Council for the substitution of a milder mode of death; but the syndics were inflexible.
    • The contributions of each village household for the quartering, re-equipment of the cavalry, and public works at Corinth were decided by the village elders in consultation with the syndics of the comunita.
    • He was the syndic of the lessees of the royal salt marshes of Peccais, an integral part of the gabelle.
  • 2(in the UK) a business agent of certain universities and corporations.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Cambridge took immediate control of its printing in 1698 and exercises it through a board of syndics.
    • There were elected councils or committees of syndics which supervised the clubs' daily routine, one of the syndics elected the bursar and the clerk.

Origin

Early 17th century: from French, via late Latin from Greek sundikos, from sun- ‘together’ + dikē ‘justice’.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 16:37:17