释义 |
Definition of chair in English: chairnoun tʃɛːtʃɛr 1A separate seat for one person, typically with a back and four legs. Example sentencesExamples - Tapping his fingers impatiently on the chair's armrest, Tom considered his options.
- She moved away from Gabriel and to the nearest available chair, taking a seat.
- Notice your behavior the next time you and your colleagues sit in a conference room for four hours in straight-back chairs.
- He gave me a playful grin and pulled out the chair next to him.
- Cafe tables and chairs face a bench seat below a lowered ceiling that curves for an atmospheric effect.
- I found a mahogany dining table and four chairs in an antique shop on Francis Street.
- I sat in my comfy swivel chair, contemplating in the dark.
- She wouldn't mind being in charge of a country if she got this kind of chair for her seat…
- We ordered a dining table and four chairs and were given a delivery time of two weeks.
- He sank into the comfortable swivel chair behind the counter and put his feet up.
- Thus, canvas seating furniture was popular, as were caned chairs, sofas, cribs, and beds.
- There was a lantern on the table providing illumination and the wooden folding chair was in front.
- Cassandra walked around the metallic table and took her seat in Inspector Stone's abandoned chair.
- Unceremoniously, some number of thugs dragged me into an edifice and roughly seated me in a slight wooden chair.
- She led me through the door into a smaller room containing a sofa and chairs with a beautiful desk and bookcase.
- The three of them sat in the wide wicker chairs on the front porch, watching as the sun set.
- Sammy sat glumly in the comfy, high-backed chair in her room.
- Four navy blue upholstered chairs surrounded a wooden coffee table that had stacks of magazines on top.
- Myra happily drove over, and within ten minutes the two were seated on lounge chairs in his bedroom, listening to a couple of CDs Myra had brought.
- His high-backed desk chair was facing away from him.
- 1.1the chair
short for electric chair Example sentencesExamples - In 1999, three of 98 executions made use of the chair.
- They fear this peaceful drug dealer and, because of this fear, they want him to die by the chair of electrocution.
- At the trial the man is sent down for murder and seeing as it's Texas he's sent to the electric chair.
- One by one, states are pulling the plug on the chairs popularly known as Old Sparky.
Synonyms electric chair electrocution, execution
2The person in charge of a meeting or of an organization (used as a neutral alternative to chairman or chairwoman) she's the chair of a research committee Example sentencesExamples - The princess is the chair of the sister organization in the United Kingdom.
- He began the first meeting of task-force chairs.
- Too often, however, the chair of an academic meeting is determined by status rather than skill.
- Now he is back, retaining the party chair but taking charge of an enlarged interior ministry with the rank of deputy prime minister.
- The Tory college could consist of MPs, grassroots grandees consisting of constituency chairs and council leaders, and finally members.
- They changed the chair of the meeting each week so as to prevent anyone having charge of the rebellion.
- ‘Mr Clark was the chair of the meeting and made a joke of this,’ Mr Morgan said.
- Not a breath, not hint of the idea that the Republican chair of the meeting was doing the disruption!
- A lay chair would oversee the council, while a medical president would preside over the executive board.
- Deputy chair of Scottish Enterprise, he bangs the drum for business formation, pushing resources into the best growth prospects.
- When the Mexican chair of the meeting declared the talks formally closed there were whoops of delight from the African delegates.
- These manage policies in their areas and provide the chairs for interdepartmental meetings.
- Questions to outline your own agenda or point of view are always appropriate when you are the presenter or the meeting chair.
- The chair of the Supreme Administrative Court also said that the article should not be amended.
- Penny White, former town mayor and deputy chair of the governors, said everybody involved in the school had worked hard and played their part.
- There were three chairs, the chief rabbi, the president of Italy and the pope, all on three equal thrones.
- The chair of the meeting had to intervene to say that this debate would be revisited at the next conference and could we get back to the industrial stuff!
- Members will choose a new chair during the next meeting, scheduled for November 17th.
- At the meetings standing committees and their chairs are elected and the deputy mayors are chosen.
- At the start of the meeting chair Alison Sinclair stated there would be a chance for a motion to come from the floor and a vote taken.
Synonyms chairperson, chairman, chairwoman, president, convener, spokesperson, spokesman, spokeswoman, leader, mc, master of ceremonies, mistress of ceremonies - 2.1 The post of a chairperson.
he was due to step down after a three-year stint in the chair Example sentencesExamples - Tomlinson was appointed to the CPB by Bill Clinton and elected chair of its board in September 2003.
- Sir Marmaduke Hussey was chair of the BBC Board of Governors from 1986 to 1996.
- There is one very interesting comment in the article from the school board vice chair.
- The chair of the police authority, said Mr Richards had been picked from a ‘strong field’.
- While he served as a councillor, he was also on the hospital board, serving as chair for one year.
- Notwithstanding his resignation as the board's chair, Perle's strategy may have worked.
- Britain must use its position as chair of the G8 and its presidency of the EU in 2005 to push real reform through those bodies.
- She will preside as chair over the board of directors, executive committee and house of delegates.
- She was the first black female board chair of the Columbus Pacific Western Urban League.
- For the school board chair, the focus should be on the response behind the event.
- Applications are also being sought for the key position of chair of the steering group and of the action group.
- Thus, presidents in Georgia do not report directly to a local board chair.
- ‘We have no powers to shut them down in the short term,’ the health board chair said.
- Rehearsals are underway for this years production which sees Siobhan Leonard return to the Director's chair.
- My official university chair was clueless as to how to support my writing and research interests.
- He was glad that the position of chair would be held by a country from Eastern Europe, which understood the problems in the region, he said.
- His career experienced a renaissance in 2002, when he became the chair of the Constitutional Convention of the EU.
- He's done a great job in the chair all year - he was little bit nervous but I knew he could do it.
- My interest in this subject is based on my experience as a community college board chair.
- Louie has been a member of the board of governors for the past five years and is currently board chair.
- The principal speaker will be Edward Luttwak, with Professor Sir Michael Howard in the chair.
- I served on the Board as chair of the Community Health section and for two terms as secretary of the Association.
- A contest for the chair was well sign posted in advance and resulted in a full house.
- O'Rian wasn't elevated to chair of the local authority before now.
- Only DC Thomson in its Dundee stronghold has reserved its editors' chairs for Scotsmen.
Synonyms chairperson, chairman, chairwoman, president, convener, spokesperson, spokesman, spokeswoman, leader, mc, master of ceremonies, mistress of ceremonies
3A professorship. he held a chair in physics Example sentencesExamples - Donors' outright and deferred gifts also have funded 22 new faculty professorships and chairs.
- Dr. Krishnan is chair and professor of psychiatry at Duke University Medical Center.
- By the 1920's the German historical school was on its last legs but still ensconced in the professorial chairs.
- Dr. Freedman is chair and professor of psychiatry, emeritus at New York Medical College.
- Next fall and at subsequent fall events, new appointees to named faculty chairs and professorships will be recognized.
- He was born in Groningen while his father held the chair of mathematics there.
- Forty-nine are college professors, 10 are college department chairs and one has become a university president.
- The Smiths' gift will be used for endowed chairs, professorships and student scholarships.
- Some schools have resorted to filling chairs with professors who hold doctorates in other fields.
- She is chair and associate professor in the psychology department at Hampton University.
- From 1939 he occupied the chair of mathematics at Durham, a position he was to hold for 20 years.
- In a room full of students, college professors and department chairs, nervous laughter again followed.
- Professor Marjorie Merryman is currently the chair of the Music Department.
- He did not stay very long in any place and after three years he was back in Graz, this time in the chair of experimental physics.
- He will also hold a new endowed professorial chair in cancer and stem cell biology.
- In 1970 James was appointed to the famous chair of Savilian Professor of Geometry.
- While we are unable to offer a professorial chair we cannot compete on a level playing field with the Universities.
- After three years in Rome, Beltrami moved to Pavia to take up the chair of mathematical physics there.
- In 1912 he held the chair of theoretical physics at the German University of Prague.
- Whittaker accepted the chair of pure mathematics at the University of Liverpool in 1933.
4British A metal socket holding a rail in place on a railway sleeper.
verb tʃɛːtʃɛr [with object]1Act as chairperson of or preside over (an organization, meeting, or public event) the debate was chaired by the Archbishop of York Example sentencesExamples - Schools will be paired with local universities to provide expert speakers, the children choosing the topic, chairing the meetings and advertising each event.
- The meeting was chaired by the President who welcomed a full attendance of members.
- The meeting was chaired by Mrs. Power, as the President was away.
- I meet her at the headquarters of her organisation where she is chairing a meeting.
- The Senator will chair a Public Forum on Child Abuse at Southbank, Brisbane on July 31.
- Councillor Brett will be chairing a fringe meeting at the Lib Dems' conference in Bournemouth in order to drum up more national support for the local campaign.
- So I was dismayed by the comments made by the conservative councillor chairing the meeting, who said this would be the last one and they would be replaced by ad hoc meetings when councillors feel they have something to tell us.
- Tonight I'm chairing a public meeting in Hoveton on policing issues and then tomorrow morning we have Michael Howard coming to Cromer.
- The office of Mayor is almost entirely ceremonial, though the Mayor chairs meetings.
- In addition to chairing meetings of the council, the office holder is obliged to attend a number of activities and functions.
- This was the first meeting chaired by the new national president.
- He is be formally known as the Mayor of the County of Kildare and will be addressed as Mayor when he chairs meetings of Kildare County Council and at all official functions.
- I am chairing public meetings around New Zealand on the misuse of methamphetamine, alcohol, and other drugs.
- During its period of office, that member state has responsibility for organizing and chairing meetings of the Council of Ministers and its various committees.
- Mr Brown, of the Crescent Hotel, agreed to chair future meetings that are open to the public.
- The meeting was chaired by the president, who welcomed the members.
- She also learned administrative skills - how to speak in public, write a grant, chair a meeting.
- If you are holding a meeting or chairing a symposium and would like to prepare a collection of papers, but do not have enough material for a Special Publication, then please get in touch.
- ‘It will be up to the administrations in those areas to decide,’ he remarked after chairing a ministerial meeting on political and security affairs.
- The institution responsible for initiatives, chairing meetings, and implementing decisions was the presidency, rotating between member states.
Synonyms preside over, take the chair of, be in the chair at, officiate at, moderate lead, direct, conduct, run, manage, control, be in charge of, be in control of, have control of, supervise, superintend, oversee, guide 2British Carry (someone) aloft in a chair or in a sitting position to celebrate a victory. no one seemed anxious to chair him round the hall Example sentencesExamples - As Lord Cloncurry was departing, there was an universal cry to chair him into town, and he was surrounded for that purpose by a large group of gentlemen near the gate of the Old Man's Hospital.
- At the completion of the game, Warne lapped up yet another standing ovation from the 79,000-strong crowd, the champ responding in kind, bowing and blowing kisses to the crowd before a futile attempt to chair him off the ground.
- So magical had been his performance that he was chaired from the ground by his opponents as well as his own team-members!
- You've never seen anyone get to the victory stand so fast, even with his short-stop house-mate Ruben's failed effort to chair him up there.
Phrases the account executive will usually take the chair in meetings Example sentencesExamples - Jim Wallace took the chair and asked if anyone had any ideas about what ministers should be doing.
- Our advisor again took the chair, in her speech she stressed the absolute necessity of having a president, secretary and treasurer, so that our branch could continue to function.
- The election process was swift with the past vice president taking the chair as president for the next two years.
- Only if the Nordic bid was to be eliminated at this stage would Johansson take the chair as president of Uefa.
- Kathy was a popular choice as President of the Kildare Guild and took the chair on many occasions - a role which she filled in a dignified and common-sense manner.
- Bridget Roche took the chair as Toastmaster for the meeting and was amply assisted by the Club President Aidan Russell.
- Ron Atkinson took the chair for the following season.
- Held in the Royal British Legion on March 10, due to the unavoidable absence of the chairman, the vice-chairman took the chair.
- It was also a significant day for Rohan who was performing his first official function in his home town since taking the chair.
- When I first took the chair of the Australia Council in the mid 90s, we surveyed most artists and writers about what they needed in order to produce their creative work.
Synonyms preside, preside over, take charge, be in charge, be in charge of, be responsible, be responsible for, direct, head, head up, manage, oversee, superintend, supervise, conduct, run, lead, chair, take the chair
Origin Middle English: from Old French chaiere (modern chaire 'bishop's throne, etc.', chaise 'chair'), from Latin cathedra 'seat', from Greek kathedra. Compare with cathedral. cathedral from Middle English: First used in the term cathedral church, a church containing the bishop's throne, cathedral comes from the Latin word for a seat or throne, cathedra, which is also the source of chair (Middle English). The term ex cathedra, meaning ‘with the full authority of office’, is a reference to the authority of the pope; its literal meaning in Latin is ‘from the chair’.
Rhymes affair, affaire, air, Altair, Althusser, Anvers, Apollinaire, Astaire, aware, Ayer, Ayr, bare, bear, bêche-de-mer, beware, billionaire, Blair, blare, Bonaire, cafetière, care, chargé d'affaires, chemin de fer, Cher, Clair, Claire, Clare, commissionaire, compare, concessionaire, cordon sanitaire, couvert, Daguerre, dare, debonair, declare, derrière, despair, doctrinaire, éclair, e'er, elsewhere, ensnare, ere, extraordinaire, Eyre, fair, fare, fayre, Finisterre, flair, flare, Folies-Bergère, forbear, forswear, foursquare, glair, glare, hair, hare, heir, Herr, impair, jardinière, Khmer, Kildare, La Bruyère, lair, laissez-faire, legionnaire, luminaire, mal de mer, mare, mayor, meunière, mid-air, millionaire, misère, Mon-Khmer, multimillionaire, ne'er, Niger, nom de guerre, outstare, outwear, pair, pare, parterre, pear, père, pied-à-terre, Pierre, plein-air, prayer, questionnaire, rare, ready-to-wear, rivière, Rosslare, Santander, savoir faire, scare, secretaire, share, snare, solitaire, Soufrière, spare, square, stair, stare, surface-to-air, swear, Tailleferre, tare, tear, their, there, they're, vin ordinaire, Voltaire, ware, wear, Weston-super-Mare, where, yeah Definition of chair in US English: chairnountʃɛrCHer 1A separate seat for one person, typically with a back and four legs. Example sentencesExamples - I sat in my comfy swivel chair, contemplating in the dark.
- Tapping his fingers impatiently on the chair's armrest, Tom considered his options.
- Sammy sat glumly in the comfy, high-backed chair in her room.
- Myra happily drove over, and within ten minutes the two were seated on lounge chairs in his bedroom, listening to a couple of CDs Myra had brought.
- She led me through the door into a smaller room containing a sofa and chairs with a beautiful desk and bookcase.
- Unceremoniously, some number of thugs dragged me into an edifice and roughly seated me in a slight wooden chair.
- His high-backed desk chair was facing away from him.
- She wouldn't mind being in charge of a country if she got this kind of chair for her seat…
- She moved away from Gabriel and to the nearest available chair, taking a seat.
- We ordered a dining table and four chairs and were given a delivery time of two weeks.
- Four navy blue upholstered chairs surrounded a wooden coffee table that had stacks of magazines on top.
- He gave me a playful grin and pulled out the chair next to him.
- Thus, canvas seating furniture was popular, as were caned chairs, sofas, cribs, and beds.
- Cafe tables and chairs face a bench seat below a lowered ceiling that curves for an atmospheric effect.
- Cassandra walked around the metallic table and took her seat in Inspector Stone's abandoned chair.
- I found a mahogany dining table and four chairs in an antique shop on Francis Street.
- There was a lantern on the table providing illumination and the wooden folding chair was in front.
- The three of them sat in the wide wicker chairs on the front porch, watching as the sun set.
- He sank into the comfortable swivel chair behind the counter and put his feet up.
- Notice your behavior the next time you and your colleagues sit in a conference room for four hours in straight-back chairs.
- 1.1
- 1.2the chair
short for electric chair Example sentencesExamples - In 1999, three of 98 executions made use of the chair.
- They fear this peaceful drug dealer and, because of this fear, they want him to die by the chair of electrocution.
- One by one, states are pulling the plug on the chairs popularly known as Old Sparky.
- At the trial the man is sent down for murder and seeing as it's Texas he's sent to the electric chair.
2The person in charge of a meeting or of an organization (used as a neutral alternative to chairman or chairwoman) a three-year term as the board’s deputy chair Example sentencesExamples - Not a breath, not hint of the idea that the Republican chair of the meeting was doing the disruption!
- Too often, however, the chair of an academic meeting is determined by status rather than skill.
- Deputy chair of Scottish Enterprise, he bangs the drum for business formation, pushing resources into the best growth prospects.
- A lay chair would oversee the council, while a medical president would preside over the executive board.
- When the Mexican chair of the meeting declared the talks formally closed there were whoops of delight from the African delegates.
- Now he is back, retaining the party chair but taking charge of an enlarged interior ministry with the rank of deputy prime minister.
- Penny White, former town mayor and deputy chair of the governors, said everybody involved in the school had worked hard and played their part.
- These manage policies in their areas and provide the chairs for interdepartmental meetings.
- The chair of the meeting had to intervene to say that this debate would be revisited at the next conference and could we get back to the industrial stuff!
- They changed the chair of the meeting each week so as to prevent anyone having charge of the rebellion.
- The chair of the Supreme Administrative Court also said that the article should not be amended.
- The Tory college could consist of MPs, grassroots grandees consisting of constituency chairs and council leaders, and finally members.
- At the start of the meeting chair Alison Sinclair stated there would be a chance for a motion to come from the floor and a vote taken.
- ‘Mr Clark was the chair of the meeting and made a joke of this,’ Mr Morgan said.
- At the meetings standing committees and their chairs are elected and the deputy mayors are chosen.
- Questions to outline your own agenda or point of view are always appropriate when you are the presenter or the meeting chair.
- The princess is the chair of the sister organization in the United Kingdom.
- He began the first meeting of task-force chairs.
- Members will choose a new chair during the next meeting, scheduled for November 17th.
- There were three chairs, the chief rabbi, the president of Italy and the pope, all on three equal thrones.
Synonyms chairperson, chairman, chairwoman, president, convener, spokesperson, spokesman, spokeswoman, leader, mc, master of ceremonies, mistress of ceremonies - 2.1 An official position of authority, for example on a board of directors.
Example sentencesExamples - Louie has been a member of the board of governors for the past five years and is currently board chair.
- My official university chair was clueless as to how to support my writing and research interests.
- He's done a great job in the chair all year - he was little bit nervous but I knew he could do it.
- Britain must use its position as chair of the G8 and its presidency of the EU in 2005 to push real reform through those bodies.
- Only DC Thomson in its Dundee stronghold has reserved its editors' chairs for Scotsmen.
- A contest for the chair was well sign posted in advance and resulted in a full house.
- ‘We have no powers to shut them down in the short term,’ the health board chair said.
- The chair of the police authority, said Mr Richards had been picked from a ‘strong field’.
- Thus, presidents in Georgia do not report directly to a local board chair.
- His career experienced a renaissance in 2002, when he became the chair of the Constitutional Convention of the EU.
- O'Rian wasn't elevated to chair of the local authority before now.
- He was glad that the position of chair would be held by a country from Eastern Europe, which understood the problems in the region, he said.
- Tomlinson was appointed to the CPB by Bill Clinton and elected chair of its board in September 2003.
- Notwithstanding his resignation as the board's chair, Perle's strategy may have worked.
- She was the first black female board chair of the Columbus Pacific Western Urban League.
- Sir Marmaduke Hussey was chair of the BBC Board of Governors from 1986 to 1996.
- Rehearsals are underway for this years production which sees Siobhan Leonard return to the Director's chair.
- My interest in this subject is based on my experience as a community college board chair.
- She will preside as chair over the board of directors, executive committee and house of delegates.
- I served on the Board as chair of the Community Health section and for two terms as secretary of the Association.
- There is one very interesting comment in the article from the school board vice chair.
- Applications are also being sought for the key position of chair of the steering group and of the action group.
- While he served as a councillor, he was also on the hospital board, serving as chair for one year.
- The principal speaker will be Edward Luttwak, with Professor Sir Michael Howard in the chair.
- For the school board chair, the focus should be on the response behind the event.
Synonyms chairperson, chairman, chairwoman, president, convener, spokesperson, spokesman, spokeswoman, leader, mc, master of ceremonies, mistress of ceremonies - 2.2Tennis
3A professorship. he held a chair in physics Example sentencesExamples - After three years in Rome, Beltrami moved to Pavia to take up the chair of mathematical physics there.
- By the 1920's the German historical school was on its last legs but still ensconced in the professorial chairs.
- Professor Marjorie Merryman is currently the chair of the Music Department.
- In a room full of students, college professors and department chairs, nervous laughter again followed.
- He will also hold a new endowed professorial chair in cancer and stem cell biology.
- While we are unable to offer a professorial chair we cannot compete on a level playing field with the Universities.
- In 1912 he held the chair of theoretical physics at the German University of Prague.
- Dr. Krishnan is chair and professor of psychiatry at Duke University Medical Center.
- He was born in Groningen while his father held the chair of mathematics there.
- Donors' outright and deferred gifts also have funded 22 new faculty professorships and chairs.
- Dr. Freedman is chair and professor of psychiatry, emeritus at New York Medical College.
- She is chair and associate professor in the psychology department at Hampton University.
- Forty-nine are college professors, 10 are college department chairs and one has become a university president.
- Next fall and at subsequent fall events, new appointees to named faculty chairs and professorships will be recognized.
- From 1939 he occupied the chair of mathematics at Durham, a position he was to hold for 20 years.
- Some schools have resorted to filling chairs with professors who hold doctorates in other fields.
- The Smiths' gift will be used for endowed chairs, professorships and student scholarships.
- Whittaker accepted the chair of pure mathematics at the University of Liverpool in 1933.
- In 1970 James was appointed to the famous chair of Savilian Professor of Geometry.
- He did not stay very long in any place and after three years he was back in Graz, this time in the chair of experimental physics.
4British A metal socket holding a railroad rail in place. 5A particular seat in an orchestra. as modifier, in combination she was fourth-chair trumpet Example sentencesExamples - She was first chair for violin in orchestra ever since middle school.
- I am interested in a bass trombone chair with an orchestra, should one become vacant.
- Donors are credited on the Musicians page of each concert programme directly beneath the chair that they have chosen to endow, recognising them as patrons of their chosen area.
- While working with one of my cello students, who is first chair in her school orchestra, the subject of "what it really means to be first chair" was something that we spoke about for quite a while.
verbtʃɛrCHer [with object]1Act as chairperson of or preside over (an organization, meeting, or public event). Example sentencesExamples - So I was dismayed by the comments made by the conservative councillor chairing the meeting, who said this would be the last one and they would be replaced by ad hoc meetings when councillors feel they have something to tell us.
- The institution responsible for initiatives, chairing meetings, and implementing decisions was the presidency, rotating between member states.
- The meeting was chaired by the president, who welcomed the members.
- In addition to chairing meetings of the council, the office holder is obliged to attend a number of activities and functions.
- Councillor Brett will be chairing a fringe meeting at the Lib Dems' conference in Bournemouth in order to drum up more national support for the local campaign.
- Tonight I'm chairing a public meeting in Hoveton on policing issues and then tomorrow morning we have Michael Howard coming to Cromer.
- If you are holding a meeting or chairing a symposium and would like to prepare a collection of papers, but do not have enough material for a Special Publication, then please get in touch.
- The Senator will chair a Public Forum on Child Abuse at Southbank, Brisbane on July 31.
- I meet her at the headquarters of her organisation where she is chairing a meeting.
- ‘It will be up to the administrations in those areas to decide,’ he remarked after chairing a ministerial meeting on political and security affairs.
- This was the first meeting chaired by the new national president.
- The office of Mayor is almost entirely ceremonial, though the Mayor chairs meetings.
- Mr Brown, of the Crescent Hotel, agreed to chair future meetings that are open to the public.
- The meeting was chaired by Mrs. Power, as the President was away.
- I am chairing public meetings around New Zealand on the misuse of methamphetamine, alcohol, and other drugs.
- During its period of office, that member state has responsibility for organizing and chairing meetings of the Council of Ministers and its various committees.
- Schools will be paired with local universities to provide expert speakers, the children choosing the topic, chairing the meetings and advertising each event.
- He is be formally known as the Mayor of the County of Kildare and will be addressed as Mayor when he chairs meetings of Kildare County Council and at all official functions.
- The meeting was chaired by the President who welcomed a full attendance of members.
- She also learned administrative skills - how to speak in public, write a grant, chair a meeting.
Synonyms preside over, take the chair of, be in the chair at, officiate at, moderate 2British Carry (someone) aloft in a chair or in a sitting position to celebrate a victory. Example sentencesExamples - You've never seen anyone get to the victory stand so fast, even with his short-stop house-mate Ruben's failed effort to chair him up there.
- So magical had been his performance that he was chaired from the ground by his opponents as well as his own team-members!
- As Lord Cloncurry was departing, there was an universal cry to chair him into town, and he was surrounded for that purpose by a large group of gentlemen near the gate of the Old Man's Hospital.
- At the completion of the game, Warne lapped up yet another standing ovation from the 79,000-strong crowd, the champ responding in kind, bowing and blowing kisses to the crowd before a futile attempt to chair him off the ground.
Phrases Example sentencesExamples - Only if the Nordic bid was to be eliminated at this stage would Johansson take the chair as president of Uefa.
- Our advisor again took the chair, in her speech she stressed the absolute necessity of having a president, secretary and treasurer, so that our branch could continue to function.
- Jim Wallace took the chair and asked if anyone had any ideas about what ministers should be doing.
- Kathy was a popular choice as President of the Kildare Guild and took the chair on many occasions - a role which she filled in a dignified and common-sense manner.
- Held in the Royal British Legion on March 10, due to the unavoidable absence of the chairman, the vice-chairman took the chair.
- Ron Atkinson took the chair for the following season.
- Bridget Roche took the chair as Toastmaster for the meeting and was amply assisted by the Club President Aidan Russell.
- It was also a significant day for Rohan who was performing his first official function in his home town since taking the chair.
- The election process was swift with the past vice president taking the chair as president for the next two years.
- When I first took the chair of the Australia Council in the mid 90s, we surveyed most artists and writers about what they needed in order to produce their creative work.
Synonyms preside, preside over, take charge, be in charge, be in charge of, be responsible, be responsible for, direct, head, head up, manage, oversee, superintend, supervise, conduct, run, lead, chair, take the chair
Origin Middle English: from Old French chaiere (modern chaire ‘bishop's throne, etc’, chaise ‘chair’), from Latin cathedra ‘seat’, from Greek kathedra. Compare with cathedral. |