invest+with+an+office

  • 71delegate — del·e·gate 1 / de li gət/ n [Medieval Latin delegatus, from Latin, past participle of delegare to appoint, put in charge]: a person empowered to act on behalf of another: as a: a person who is authorized to perform another s duties under a… …

    Law dictionary

  • 72Everett M. "Busy" Arnold — Busy Arnold, circa 1940s Born Everett M. Arnold May 20, 1899(1899 05 20) Providence, Rhode Island …

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  • 73Gordon Reid (businessman) — Gordon Reid is a Canadian businessperson. He is the founder of Giant Tiger Stores Ltd., Canada’s third largest chain of discount stores.[1] Contents 1 Early life (1933 1961) 2 Giant Tiger …

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  • 74Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center — Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center …

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  • 75Royal Dutch Shell environmental issues — Royal Dutch Shell is engaged in a variety of business activities across the world which of necessity involves the extraction, production, handling, processing, storage and transportation of hazardous products, including hydrocarbons and chemicals …

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  • 76Miramax Films — Miramax redirects here. For the book publisher, see Miramax Books. Miramax Film Corp. Type Subsidiary of Filmyard Holdings Industry Film …

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  • 77Nakonde District —   District   District location in Zambia Country …

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  • 78Investiture Controversy — A medieval king investing a bishop with the symbols of office. By Philip Van Ness Myers, 1905 The Investiture Controversy or Investiture Contest[1] was the most significant conflict between Church and state in medieval Europe. In the 11th and… …

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  • 79investment — (n.) 1590s, act of putting on vestments (a sense now found in INVESTITURE (Cf. investiture)); later act of being invested with an office, right, endowment, etc. (1640s); and surrounding and besieging of a military target (1811); see INVEST (Cf.… …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 80benefice — /ben euh fis/, n., v., beneficed, beneficing. n. 1. a position or post granted to an ecclesiastic that guarantees a fixed amount of property or income. 2. the revenue itself. 3. the equivalent of a fief in the early Middle Ages. v.t. 4. to invest …

    Universalium