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chancellor+of+england

  • 1 Chancellor of England

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Chancellor of England

  • 2 chancellor\ of\ England

    English-Hungarian dictionary > chancellor\ of\ England

  • 3 lord chancellor of england

    • glavni sudija; pretsednik gornjeg doma

    English-Serbian dictionary > lord chancellor of england

  • 4 chancellor

    {'tJainsala}
    1. канцлер
    the Lord (High), the CHANCELLOR of England председател на Камарата на лордовете и министър на правосъдието (в Англия) -, CHANCELLOR of the Exchequer министър на финансите в Англия
    CHANCELLOR of the Duchy of Lancaster английски министър, представляващ кралицата (обик. без портфейл)
    2. ректор на университет
    CHANCELLOR's office ректорат
    3. юридически съветник на владика
    4. канцлер (министърпредседател в Австрия, ФРГ), главен секретар на посолство
    * * *
    {'tJainsala} n 1. канцлер; the Lord (High) C., the C. of E
    * * *
    ректор; канцлер;
    * * *
    1. chancellor of the duchy of lancaster английски министър, представляващ кралицата (обик. без портфейл) 2. chancellor's office ректорат 3. the lord (high), the chancellor of england председател на Камарата на лордовете и министър на правосъдието (в Англия) -, chancellor of the exchequer министър на финансите в Англия 4. канцлер 5. канцлер (министърпредседател в Австрия, ФРГ), главен секретар на посолство 6. ректор на университет 7. юридически съветник на владика
    * * *
    chancellor[´tʃa:nsələ] n 1. канцлер; the Lord ( High) C., the C. of England лорд-канцлер, председател на Камарата на лордовете и министър на правосъдието в Англия; C. of the Exchequer министър на финансите в Англия; C. of the Duchy of Lancaster член на английския кабинет (обикн. без портфейл), който представлява краля; 2. ректор (на англ. университет); \chancellor's office ректорат; 3. юридически съветник на епископ; 4. министър-председател (на Германия и Австрия); 5. първи секретар на британско посолство.

    English-Bulgarian dictionary > chancellor

  • 5 chancellor

    [ʹtʃɑ:ns(ə)lə] n
    1. канцлер

    Chancellor of the Exchequer - канцлер казначейства, министр финансов ( в Великобритании)

    Chancellor of England, the King's Chancellor - ист. лорд-канцлер ( в Англии)

    2. дип. преим. амер. советник или первый секретарь посольства
    3. ректор университета (в Великобритании - почётный, в США - фактический)
    4. юр.
    1) судья, председатель суда, особ. канцлерского суда ( в Великобритании)
    2) председатель суда справедливости ( в некоторых штатах США)
    5. старшина коллегии присяжных

    НБАРС > chancellor

  • 6 chancellor

    n
    1) канцлер

    C. of the Exchequer — канцлер казначейства; міністр фінансів (в Англії)

    Lord (High) C. — лорд-канцлер

    2) амер. перший секретар посольства
    3) ректор університету (в Англії — почесний, у США — дійсний)
    4) юр. голова «суду справедливості» (в деяких штатах США)
    5) церк. управитель собору
    * * *
    n

    Chancellor of the Exchequer — канцлер казначейства, міністр фінансів ( у Великій Британії)

    Chancellor of England, the King's C. — icт. лорд-канцлер ( в Англії)

    2) дип.; aмep. радник або перший секретар посольства
    3) ректор університету (у Великій Британії- почесний, у США- фактичний)
    4) юp. суддя, голова суду, канцлерського суду ( у Великій Британії); голова суду справедливості ( у деяких штатах США)

    English-Ukrainian dictionary > chancellor

  • 7 chancellor

    n

    Chancellor of the Exchequer — канцлер казначейства, міністр фінансів ( у Великій Британії)

    Chancellor of England, the King's C. — icт. лорд-канцлер ( в Англії)

    2) дип.; aмep. радник або перший секретар посольства
    3) ректор університету (у Великій Британії- почесний, у США- фактичний)
    4) юp. суддя, голова суду, канцлерського суду ( у Великій Британії); голова суду справедливості ( у деяких штатах США)

    English-Ukrainian dictionary > chancellor

  • 8 chancellor

    /'tʃɑ:nsələ/ * danh từ - đại pháp quan; quan chưởng ấn =the Lord Chancellor of England; the Lord High Chancellor+ đại pháp quan Anh - thủ tướng (áo, Đức) - hiệu trưởng danh dự trường đại học

    English-Vietnamese dictionary > chancellor

  • 9 chancellor

    ˈtʃɑ:nsələ сущ.
    1) канцлер;
    премьер-министрнекоторых европейских странах) Chancellor of the Exchequerканцлер казначейства (министр финансов Англии) Lord High Chancellor
    2) брит. номинальный глава университета
    3) судья в суде лорда-канцлера (в некоторых государствах) канцлер;
    - C. of the Exchequer канцлер казначейства, министр финансов;
    - C. of England, the King's C. (историческое) лорд-канцлер( в Англии) ;
    - Federal C. федеральный канцлер (в ФРГ и в Австрии) (дипломатическое) преим. (американизм) советник или первый секретарь посольства ректор университета( в Великобритании - почетный, в США - фактический) (юридическое) судья, председатель суда, особ. канцлерского суда ( в Великобритании) (юридическое) председатель суда справделивости (в некоторых штатах США) старшина коллегии присяжных chancellor канцлер;
    Chancellor of the Exchequer канцлер казначейства (министр финансов Англии) ~ канцлер ~ номинальный президент университета (в США действительный) ~ первый секретарь посольства ~ председатель суда ~ ректор университета ~ шотл. старшина присяжных заседателей ~ судья Chancellor of Justice председатель суда справедливости (в США) chancellor канцлер;
    Chancellor of the Exchequer канцлер казначейства (министр финансов Англии) Chancellor of the Exchequer министр финансов (Великобритания) exchequer: Chancellor of the Exchequer канцлер казначейства (министр финансов Великобритании) Lord Chancellor лорд-канцлер (глава судебного ведомства и верховный судья Англии, председатель палаты лордов и одного из отделений верховного суда) Lord High Chancellor лорд-канцлер (Великобритания) vice ~ вице-канцлер

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > chancellor

  • 10 Lord Chancellor

    ( britisk politikk) lordkansler, justisminister

    English-Norwegian dictionary > Lord Chancellor

  • 11 Lord Chancellor

    lordkansler (i England)

    English-Swedish dictionary > Lord Chancellor

  • 12 General Commissioners

    Fin
    a body of unpaid individuals appointed by the Lord Chancellor in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland and the Secretary of State for Scotland in Scotland, to hear appeals on tax matters

    The ultimate business dictionary > General Commissioners

  • 13 Florey, Howard Walter

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 24 September 1898 Adelaide, Australia
    d. 21 February 1968 Oxford, England
    [br]
    Australian pathologist who contributed to the research and technology resulting in the practical clinical availability of penicillin.
    [br]
    After graduating MB and BS from Adelaide University in 1921, he went to Oxford University, England, as a Rhodes Scholar in 1922. Following a period at Cambridge and as a Rockefeller Fellow in the USA, he returned to Cambridge as Lecturer in Pathology. He was appointed to the Chair of Pathology at Sheffield at the age of 33, and to the Sir William Dunne Chair of Pathology at Oxford in 1935.
    Although historically his name is inseparable from that of penicillin, his experimental interests and achievements covered practically the whole range of general pathology. He was a determined advocate of the benefits to research of maintaining close contact between different disciplines. He was an early believer in the need to study functional changes in cells as much as the morphological changes that these brought about.
    With E. Chain, Florey perceived the potential of Fleming's 1929 note on the bacteria-inhibiting qualities of Penicillium mould. His forthright and dynamic character played a vital part in developing what was perceived to be not just a scientific and medical discovery of unparalleled importance, but a matter of the greatest significance in a war of survival. Between them, Florey and Chain were able to establish the technique of antibiotic isolation and made their findings available to those implementing large-scale fermentation production processes in the USA.
    Despite being domiciled in England, he played an active role in Australian medical and educational affairs and was installed as Chancellor of the Australian National University in 1966.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Life peer 1965. Order of Merit 1965. Knighted 1944. FRS 1941. President, Royal Society 1960–5. Nobel Prize for Medicine or Physiology (jointly with E.B.Chain and A.Fleming) 1945. Copley Medal 1957. Commander, Légion d'honneur 1946. British Medical Association Gold Medal 1964.
    Bibliography
    1940, "Penicillin as a chemotherapeutic agent", Lancet (with Chain). 1949, Antibiotics, Oxford (with Chain et al.).
    1962, General Pathology, Oxford.
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Florey, Howard Walter

  • 14 Lord

    Lord Advocate — лорд-адвокат, генеральный прокурор по делам Шотландии;

    Lord Chamberlain — лорд-камергер, лорд-гофмейстер;

    Lord (High) Chancellorлорд-канцлер (член кабинета министров в Великобритании, спикер палаты лордов, председатель Верховного суда);

    Lord Chief Justice of England — судья-председатель отделения королевской скамьи Высокого суда правосудия, лорд-главный судья;

    Lord Commissionerлорд-уполномоченный (один из 5 лордов-уполномоченных, входящих в состав руководства министерства финансов в Великобритании);

    Lord Great Chamberlain — лорд обер-гофмейстер;

    Lord High Steward of England — 1. лорд-распорядитель (на коронации и т.п.) 2. председатель суда пэров ( назначенный для рассмотрения конкретного дела);

    Lord Justice Clerkшотл. вице-председатель Высшего уголовного суда и председатель внешней палаты Сессионного суда;

    Lord Keeper of the Great Seal — лорд-хранитель большой государственной печати;

    Lord Lieutenant — 1. генерал-губернатор Олстера (после 1922 г.) 2. лорд-лейтенант, хранитель архива и главный мировой судья графства ( в Великобритании);

    Lord Mayor — лорд-мэр;

    Lord Privy Purse — лорд-хранитель сумм, ассигнованных на личные королевские расходы;

    Lord Steward of the Household — лорд-сенешал;

    - Lords of Parliament
    - Lord of Session
    - First Lord of the Admiralty
    - First Lord of the Treasury
    - First Sea Lord

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Lord

  • 15 Albert, Prince Consort

    [br]
    b. 26 August 1819 The Rosenau, near Coburg, Germany
    d. 14 December 1861 Windsor Castle, England
    [br]
    German/British polymath and Prince Consort to Queen Victoria.
    [br]
    Albert received a sound education in the arts and sciences, carefully designed to fit him for a role as consort to the future Queen Victoria. After their marriage in 1840, Albert threw himself into the task of establishing his position as, eventually, Prince Consort and uncrowned king of England. By his undoubted intellectual gifts, unrelenting hard work and moral rectitude, Albert moulded the British constitutional monarchy into the form it retains to this day. The purchase in 1845 of the Osborne estate in the Isle of Wight provided not only the growing royal family with a comfortable retreat from London and public life, but Albert with full scope for his abilities as architect and planner. With Thomas Cubitt, the eminent engineer and contractor, Albert erected at Osborne one of the most remarkable buildings of the nineteenth century. He went on to design the house and estate at Balmoral in Scotland, another notable creation.
    Albert applied his abilities as architect and planner in the promotion of such public works as the London sewer system and, in practical form, the design of cottages for workers, such as those in south London, as well as those on the royal estates. Albert's other main contribution to technology was as educationist in a broad sense. In 1847, he was elected Chancellor of Cambridge University. He was appalled at the low standards and narrow curriculum prevailing there and at Oxford. He was no mere figurehead, but took a close and active interest in the University's affairs. With his powerful influence behind them, the reforming fellows were able to force measures to raise standards and widen the curriculum to take account, in particular, of the rapid progress in the natural sciences. Albert was instrumental in ending the lethargy of centuries and laying the foundations of the modern British university system.
    In 1847 the Prince became Secretary of the Royal Society of Arts. With Henry Cole, the noted administrator who shared Albert's concern for the arts, he promoted a series of exhibitions under the auspices of the Society. From these grew the idea of a great exhibition of the products of the decorative and industrial arts. It was Albert who decided that its scope should be international. As Chairman of the organizing committee, by sheer hard work he drove the project through to a triumphant conclusion. The success of the Exhibition earned it a handsome profit for which Albert had found a use even before it closed. The proceeds went towards the purchase of a site in South Kensington, for which he drew up a grand scheme for a complex of museums and colleges for the education of the people in the sciences and the arts. This largely came to fruition and South Kensington today is a fitting memorial to the Prince Consort's wisdom and concern for the public good.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Sir Theodore Martin, 1875–80, The Life of His Royal Highness, the Prince Consort, 5 vols, London; German edn 1876; French edn 1883 (the classic life of the Prince).
    R.R.James, 1983, Albert, Prince Consort: A Biography, London: Hamish Hamilton (the standard modern biography).
    L.R.Day, 1989, "Resources for the study of the history of technology in the Science Museum Library", IATUL Quarterly 3:122–39 (provides a short account of the rise of South Kensington and its institutions).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Albert, Prince Consort

  • 16 Babbage, Charles

    [br]
    b. 26 December 1791 Walworth, Surrey, England
    d. 18 October 1871 London, England
    [br]
    English mathematician who invented the forerunner of the modern computer.
    [br]
    Charles Babbage was the son of a banker, Benjamin Babbage, and was a sickly child who had a rather haphazard education at private schools near Exeter and later at Enfield. Even as a child, he was inordinately fond of algebra, which he taught himself. He was conversant with several advanced mathematical texts, so by the time he entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1811, he was ahead of his tutors. In his third year he moved to Peterhouse, whence he graduated in 1814, taking his MA in 1817. He first contributed to the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society in 1815, and was elected a fellow of that body in 1816. He was one of the founders of the Astronomical Society in 1820 and served in high office in it.
    While he was still at Cambridge, in 1812, he had the first idea of calculating numerical tables by machinery. This was his first difference engine, which worked on the principle of repeatedly adding a common difference. He built a small model of an engine working on this principle between 1820 and 1822, and in July of the latter year he read an enthusiastically received note about it to the Astronomical Society. The following year he was awarded the Society's first gold medal. He submitted details of his invention to Sir Humphry Davy, President of the Royal Society; the Society reported favourably and the Government became interested, and following a meeting with the Chancellor of the Exchequer Babbage was awarded a grant of £1,500. Work proceeded and was carried on for four years under the direction of Joseph Clement.
    In 1827 Babbage went abroad for a year on medical advice. There he studied foreign workshops and factories, and in 1832 he published his observations in On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures. While abroad, he received the news that he had been appointed Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge University. He held the Chair until 1839, although he neither resided in College nor gave any lectures. For this he was paid between £80 and £90 a year! Differences arose between Babbage and Clement. Manufacture was moved from Clement's works in Lambeth, London, to new, fireproof buildings specially erected by the Government near Babbage's house in Dorset Square, London. Clement made a large claim for compensation and, when it was refused, withdrew his workers as well as all the special tools he had made up for the job. No work was possible for the next fifteen months, during which Babbage conceived the idea of his "analytical engine". He approached the Government with this, but it was not until eight years later, in 1842, that he received the reply that the expense was considered too great for further backing and that the Government was abandoning the project. This was in spite of the demonstration and perfectly satisfactory operation of a small section of the analytical engine at the International Exhibition of 1862. It is said that the demands made on manufacture in the production of his engines had an appreciable influence in improving the standard of machine tools, whilst similar benefits accrued from his development of a system of notation for the movements of machine elements. His opposition to street organ-grinders was a notable eccentricity; he estimated that a quarter of his mental effort was wasted by the effect of noise on his concentration.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1816. Astronomical Society Gold Medal 1823.
    Bibliography
    Babbage wrote eighty works, including: 1864, Passages from the Life of a Philosopher.
    July 1822, Letter to Sir Humphry Davy, PRS, on the Application of Machinery to the purpose of calculating and printing Mathematical Tables.
    Further Reading
    1961, Charles Babbage and His Calculating Engines: Selected Writings by Charles Babbage and Others, eds Philip and Emily Morrison, New York: Dover Publications.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Babbage, Charles

  • 17 Maudslay, Henry

    [br]
    b. 22 August 1771 Woolwich, Kent, England
    d. 15 February 1831 Lambeth, London, England
    [br]
    English precision toolmaker and engineer.
    [br]
    Henry Maudslay was the third son of an ex-soldier and storekeeper at Woolwich Arsenal. At the age of 12 he was employed at the Arsenal filling cartridges; two years later he was transferred to the woodworking department, adjacent to the smithy, to which he moved when 15 years old. He was a rapid learner, and three years later Joseph Bramah took him on for the construction of special tools required for the mass-production of his locks. Maudslay was thus employed for the next eight years. He became Bramah's foreman, married his housekeeper, Sarah Tindale, and, unable to better himself, decided to leave and set up on his own. He soon outgrew his first premises in Wells Street and moved to Margaret Street, off Oxford Street, where some examples of his workmanship were displayed in the window. These caught the attention of a visiting Frenchman, de Bacquancourt; he was a friend of Marc Isambard Brunel, who was then in the early stages of designing the block-making machinery later installed at Portsmouth dockyard.
    Brunel wanted first a set of working models, as he did not think that the Lords of the Admiralty would be capable of understanding engineering drawings; Maudslay made these for him within the next two years. Sir Samuel Bentham, Inspector-General of Naval Works, agreed that Brunel's system was superior to the one that he had gone some way in developing; the Admiralty approved, and an order was placed for the complete plant. The manufacture of the machinery occupied Maudslay for the next six years; he was assisted by a draughtsman whom he took on from Portsmouth dockyard, Joshua Field (1786–1863), who became his partner in Maudslay, Son and Field. There were as many as eighty employees at Margaret Street until, in 1810, larger premises became necessary and a new works was built at Lambeth Marsh where, eventually, there were up to two hundred workers. The new factory was flanked by two houses, one of which was occupied by Maudslay, the other by Field. The firm became noted for its production of marine steam-engines, notably Maudslay's table engine which was first introduced in 1807.
    Maudslay was a consummate craftsman who was never happier than when working at his bench or at a machine tool; he was also one of the first engineers to appreciate the virtues of standardization. Evidence of this appreciation is to be found in his work in the development of the Bramah lock and then on the machine tools for the manufacture of ship's blocks to Marc Brunel's designs; possibly his most important contribution was the invention in 1797 of the metal lathe. He made a number of surface plates of the finest quality. The most celebrated of his numerous measuring devices was a micrometer-based machine which he termed his "Lord Chancellor" because, in the machine shop, it represented the "final court of appeal", measuring to one-thousandth of an inch.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    1934–5, "Maudslay, Sons \& Field as general engineers", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 15, London.
    1963, Engineering Heritage, Vol. 1, London: Institution of Mechanical Engineers. L.T.C.Rolt, 1965, Tools for the Job, London: Batsford.
    W.Steeds, 1969, A History of Machine Tools 1700–1910, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Maudslay, Henry

  • 18 lord

    English-Ukrainian law dictionary > lord

  • 19 C.E.

    1) (скор. від Church of England) англіка́нська це́рква
    2) (скор. від civil engineer) інжене́р-будіве́льник
    3) (скор. від common era) на́ша е́ра
    4) (скор. від Chancellor of the Exchequer) ка́нцлер казначе́йства ( міністр фінансів в Англії)

    English-Ukrainian transcription dictionary > C.E.

  • 20 iron

    iron ['aɪən]
    (a) (made of, containing iron) de fer, en fer
    (b) figurative (strong) de fer, d'acier;
    iron discipline une discipline de fer;
    an iron hand or fist in a velvet glove une main de fer dans un gant de velours
    (laundry) repasser
    (laundry) se repasser
    4 noun
    (a) (metal) fer m;
    made of iron de ou en fer;
    she has a will of iron elle a une volonté de fer;
    the iron and steel industry la sidérurgie;
    (as) hard as iron dur comme ou aussi dur que le fer
    (b) (in diet) fer m;
    spinach has a high iron content les épinards contiennent beaucoup de fer
    (c) (for laundry) fer m (à repasser);
    your shirt needs an iron ta chemise a besoin d'un coup de fer ou d'être repassée
    (d) (tool, appliance) fer m;
    to have many irons in the fire avoir plusieurs fers au feu
    a five iron un fer cinq
    (f) South of England very familiar (rhyming slang iron hoof = poof) pédale f, tantouze f, tapette f
    (chains) fers mpl;
    clap them in irons! mettez-les aux fers!
    ►► the Iron Age l'âge m du fer;
    an Iron Age tool un outil de l'âge du fer;
    iron bar barre f de fer;
    iron bridge pont m en fer;
    History Iron Chancellor chancelier m de fer;
    the Iron Curtain le rideau de fer;
    the Iron Curtain countries les pays mpl de l'Est;
    Medicine iron deficiency carence f en fer;
    familiar Technology iron fairy grue f;
    iron filings limaille f de fer;
    iron foundry fonderie f (de fonte);
    an iron grating une grille en fer;
    American History the iron horse = la locomotive;
    British Politics the Iron Lady la Dame de Fer (surnom donné à Margaret Thatcher);
    Medicine iron lung poumon m d'acier;
    iron maiden = instrument de torture consistant en un coffre à l'intérieur parsemé de pointes, dans lequel on place la victime;
    Mineralogy iron ore minerai m de fer;
    Mineralogy iron oxide oxyde m de fer;
    iron pyrites Mineralogy pyrite f (de fer);
    Golf iron shot coup m de fer;
    Industry Iron and Steel Trades Confederation = syndicat britannique des ouvriers de la sidérurgie;
    Medicine iron tablet comprimé m de fer;
    an iron will une volonté de fer
    (a) (crease) enlever au fer
    (b) figurative (problem, difficulty) aplanir;
    have you ironed out your differences? est-ce que vous avez résolu vos différends?
    ✾ Book 'The Iron Man' Hughes 'Le Géant de fer'

    Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > iron

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  • Lord high chancellor of England — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • England (Since the Reformation) —     England (Since the Reformation)     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► England (Since the Reformation)     The Protestant Reformation is the great dividing line in the history of England, as of Europe generally. This momentous Revolution, the outcome… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Chancellor — Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery, which in… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chancellor of a bishop — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chancellor of a cathedral — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chancellor of a diocese — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chancellor of a university — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chancellor of the exchequer — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chancellor of the order of the Garter — Chancellor Chan cel*lor, n. [OE. canceler, chaunceler, F. chancelier, LL. cancellarius chancellor, a director of chancery, fr. L. cancelli lattices, crossbars, which surrounded the seat of judgment. See {Chancel}.] A judicial court of chancery,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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