搜尋結果
mandate
- IPA[ˈmanˌdāt]
美式
- an official order or commission to do something;a commission by which a party is entrusted to perform a service, especially without payment and with indemnity against loss by that party.
- give (someone) authority to act in a certain way;require (something) to be done; make mandatory
verb: mandate, 3rd person present: mandates, gerund or present participle: mandating, past tense: mandated, past participle: mandated
noun: mandate, plural noun: mandates
- 釋義
名詞
- 1. an official order or commission to do something a mandate to seek the release of political prisoners 同義詞
- ▪ a commission by which a party is entrusted to perform a service, especially without payment and with indemnity against loss by that party.
- ▪ US an order from an appellate court to a lower court to take a specific action.
- ▪ a written authority enabling someone to carry out transactions on another's bank account.
- ▪ historical a commission from the League of Nations to a member state to administer a territory the end of the British mandate in Palestine
- 2. the authority to carry out a policy or course of action, regarded as given by the electorate to a candidate or party that is victorious in an election a sick leader living beyond his mandate 同義詞
- ▪ Canadian a period during which a government is in power the last mandate of Trudeau, from 1980 to 1984, was a remarkable chapter in Canadian history
動詞
- 1. give (someone) authority to act in a certain way other colleges have mandated coed fraternities
- ▪ require (something) to be done; make mandatory the government began mandating better car safety
- 2. historical assign (territory) under a mandate of the League of Nations mandated territories
- 更多解釋
- an official order or commission to do something: a mandate to seek the release of political prisoners
- give (someone) authority to act in a certain way: the rightful king was mandated and sanctioned by God
Oxford Dictionary