释义 |
Definition of executor in English: executornoun ɛɡˈzɛkjʊtəɪɡˈzɛkjʊtəɪɡˈzɛkjədər 1Law A person or institution appointed by a testator to carry out the terms of their will. 〔律〕遗嘱执行人 Hugh appointed him an executor of his will the executors of the late John B. Smith Example sentencesExamples - Under the terms of clause 3 he must be appointed by the executors, and I propose to make orders reinstituting this procedure which the testator laid down rather than ordering an inquiry.
- He can certainly be appointed as executor of an estate by a testator who nominates him as such in a will.
- The problem in modern times usually does not arise because most testators who have infant children appoint an executor and also appoint the executor guardian.
- Beginning in 2010, the regulations will allow an executor or a personal representative of an estate to adjust the cost basis of assets acquired by the estate's beneficiaries.
- Rather than conducting a regular probate where an executor is appointed and letters testamentary are issued by the court, it sounds like you can probate her will as a Muniment of Title.
2A person who produces something or puts something into effect. 执行者;实施者 the makers and executors of policy 政策的制定者和实施者。 Example sentencesExamples - Gunawan made the headlines as his case also implicated four Marine officers who were the alleged executors of the fatal shooting.
- The ISR rehearsal is led by the ISR executor and should be attended by brigade key leaders and a knowledgeable representative from every unit in the brigade.
- Becoming aware of itself, the self also discovers that it is not really its own, but is rather the involuntary executor of cosmic designs.
- However, it should be noted the sample population was quite small and was skewed toward installation commanders, the executors of current outsourcing policies.
- But a dangerous paradox arose between segregation as a comprehensive state policy of social engineering and its likely executors in the local setting.
- Record-keeping guidelines set by state law, as well as by APA's Ethics Code, should be followed by the professional executor.
- They believe that the governor is the primary executor of this agreement, and that's why they went after him.
- With party members dominating administrative bodies, which included the people's commissariats at the top, those bodies functioned as executors of party policy.
- Chen must act like a CEO who insists on tough discipline among his team, for the partially reorganized Cabinet acts as his policy executor.
- And they are not actors, but executors of a real and serious political strategy.
- The Koreans were not the puppets of the Soviet Union or its foreign policy executors.
- But Moscow didn't want to discover the executor of the contract, being afraid that the USA would apply sanctions against RPSAM.
Synonyms doer, performer, author, perpetrator, operator, operative, mover, producer
Derivativesadjective ɪɡzɛkjʊˈtɔːrɪəlɛɡzɛkjʊˈtɔːrɪəl rare Relating to or having the power to carry out the terms of a will or decree. the formal judgment and executorial letters The broker merely serves an executorial role and usually sides with management.
noun Jerome declined the executorship; Stockebrand gave up her executorship in 1996 as part of an agreement with the estate. Example sentencesExamples - It is a legal structure that has been designed to accomplish several desirable goals, two of which are to avoid executorship and paying estate duty.
adjective ɪɡˈzɛkjʊt(ə)riɛɡˈzɛkjʊt(ə)riɪɡˈzɛkjəˌtɔri Law Requiring the carrying out of a law, instruction, etc. Example sentencesExamples - an executory obligation to provide a guarantee
- In seeing whether there is an implied provision for its solution, however, there is a difference between an arrangement which is wholly executory on both sides, and one which has been executed on one side or the other.
- Where a contract has once come into existence, even the expression ‘to be agreed’ in relation to future executory obligations is not necessarily fatal to its continued existence.
- The question whether an executory contract is enforceable is quite different from the question whether assets of which there has been a ‘knowing receipt’ are recoverable from the recipient.
OriginMiddle English: via Anglo-Norman French from Latin execut- 'carried out', from exsequi (see execute). Definition of executor in US English: executornounɪɡˈzɛkjədəriɡˈzekyədər 1Law A person or institution appointed by a testator to carry out the terms of their will. 〔律〕遗嘱执行人 Example sentencesExamples - Rather than conducting a regular probate where an executor is appointed and letters testamentary are issued by the court, it sounds like you can probate her will as a Muniment of Title.
- The problem in modern times usually does not arise because most testators who have infant children appoint an executor and also appoint the executor guardian.
- He can certainly be appointed as executor of an estate by a testator who nominates him as such in a will.
- Under the terms of clause 3 he must be appointed by the executors, and I propose to make orders reinstituting this procedure which the testator laid down rather than ordering an inquiry.
- Beginning in 2010, the regulations will allow an executor or a personal representative of an estate to adjust the cost basis of assets acquired by the estate's beneficiaries.
2A person who produces something or puts something into effect. 执行者;实施者 the makers and executors of policy 政策的制定者和实施者。 Example sentencesExamples - And they are not actors, but executors of a real and serious political strategy.
- They believe that the governor is the primary executor of this agreement, and that's why they went after him.
- However, it should be noted the sample population was quite small and was skewed toward installation commanders, the executors of current outsourcing policies.
- The Koreans were not the puppets of the Soviet Union or its foreign policy executors.
- But Moscow didn't want to discover the executor of the contract, being afraid that the USA would apply sanctions against RPSAM.
- Record-keeping guidelines set by state law, as well as by APA's Ethics Code, should be followed by the professional executor.
- Gunawan made the headlines as his case also implicated four Marine officers who were the alleged executors of the fatal shooting.
- But a dangerous paradox arose between segregation as a comprehensive state policy of social engineering and its likely executors in the local setting.
- With party members dominating administrative bodies, which included the people's commissariats at the top, those bodies functioned as executors of party policy.
- The ISR rehearsal is led by the ISR executor and should be attended by brigade key leaders and a knowledgeable representative from every unit in the brigade.
- Becoming aware of itself, the self also discovers that it is not really its own, but is rather the involuntary executor of cosmic designs.
- Chen must act like a CEO who insists on tough discipline among his team, for the partially reorganized Cabinet acts as his policy executor.
Synonyms doer, performer, author, perpetrator, operator, operative, mover, producer
OriginMiddle English: via Anglo-Norman French from Latin execut- ‘carried out’, from exsequi (see execute). |