任命英语怎么说
Since 1884, parliamentarism has ensured that the cabinet must have the support of the parliament, so the appointment by the King is a formality.
The foreign ministry in March inaugurated blue robot-cat Doraemon as Japan's "anime ambassador."
I have been assigned to look for quality suppliers in Asia Pacific region.
A new manager has been appointed to direct the project.
Here the wedding industry swoops in, loudly appointing itself official counsellor.
Prince Talal, an outspoken senior non-Sudairi, openly questioned the appointment.
The announcement was dedicated to the guiding light of the AIDS fight, Elizabeth Glaser, who was desperately ill with AIDS and would die in three weeks.
He was ordained (as) a priest last year.
My stepfather was a former priest, one of the early black men ordained to the priesthood in the United States.
After the park's official formation, Nathaniel Langford was appointed as the park's first superintendent in 1872.
Pierre Salinger was appointed senator from California but subsequently lost his first election.
Jobs immediately named a new executive to run MobileMe, and shortly after the meeting, most of the team was disbanded.
In 1967 Johnson nominated Thurgood Marshall to the Supreme Court.
Yesterday, he named his cabinet and took a big gamble in the process.
Within two weeks, he was talking for the first time with the board of Hartford Financial Services Group, which named him CEO and chairman on September 29.
He was appointed Apostolic Administrator of Minsk by Pope John Paul II.
In December 1904 she was appointed chief assistant in the laboratory directed by Pierre Curie.
In each group, the biggest or oldest pupil is made a monitor.
The baroque explanations of why the appointment had to be kept a secret from the prime minister, or anyone else, were unconvincing.
There has been a mixed reaction to her appointment as director.
And the cabins were given leaders and they gave themselves names.
I have been nominated to the committee.
Her appointment was seen as a consolation prize after she lost the election.
Even Tommasini, who had advocated Gilbert's appointment in the Times, calls him "an unpretentious musician with no air of the formidable conductor about him".
Jacqui Smith, given the job by Mr Brown in 2007, is now facing a parliamentary investigation into her expenses as an MP.