Word Meanings - COMMISSIONATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To commission
Related words: (words related to COMMISSIONATE)
- COMMISSIONAIRE
1. One intrusted with a commission, now only a small commission, as an errand; esp., an attendant or subordinate employee in a public office, hotel, or the like. The commissionaire familiar to European travelers performs miscellaneous services - COMMISSION
1. The act of committing, doing, or performing; the act of perpetrating. Every commission of sin introduces into the soul a certain degree of hardness. South. 2. The act of intrusting; a charge; instructions as to how a trust shall be executed. - COMMISSIONAL; COMMISSIONARY
Of pertaining to, or conferring, a commission; conferred by a commission or warrant. Delegate or commissionary authority. Bp. Hall. - COMMISSIONATE
To commission - COMMISSIONNAIRE
1. An agent or factor; a commission merchant. 2. One of a class of attendants, in some European cities, who perform miscellaneous services for travelers. - COMMISSIONER
1. A person who has a commission or warrant to perform some office, or execute some bussiness, for the goverment, corporation, or person employing him; as, a commissioner to take affidavits or to adjust claims. To another adress which requisted - COMMISSIONSHIP
The office of commissioner. Sir W. Scott. - NONCOMMISSIONED
Not having a commission. Noncommissioned officer , a subordinate officer not appointed by a commission from the chief executive or supreme authority of the State; but by the Secretary of War or by the commanding officer of the regiment. - CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
In the United States, a commission appointed by the President, consisting of three members, not more than two of whom may be adherents of the same party, which has the control, through examinations, of appointments and promotions in the classified - RECOMMISSION
To commission again; to give a new commission to. Officers whose time of service had expired were to be recommissioned. Marshall. - DISCOMMISSION
To deprive of a commission or trust. Laud.