conservator 的定义
- a person who conserves or preserves; preserver; protector.
- a person who repairs, restores, or maintains the condition of objects, as paintings or sculptures in an art museum, or books in a library.
- Law. a guardian; a custodian.
- British. a person employed by the conservancy commission; a conservation 2 worker.
conservator 近义词
caretaker of collection
更多conservator例句
- Archivists, conservators and experts provide more context to screenings, answering audience questions and talking about how their own work intersects with the films.
- If they succeeded, the find could be transported to Edinburgh, where it could be safely picked apart by conservators in a lab at the National Museum.
- When one loses the capacity to make decisions for oneself the court appoints a guardian, or conservator, to make those decisions.
- Wallet, the court-appointed lawyer, resigned as co-conservator in 2019, leaving Jamie Spears the sole conservator.
- In such cases, courts took basic freedoms from grown men and women and gave conservators sweeping power over their money and the smallest details of their lives.
- Later, a Riverside judge ruled that Mills would remain as the conservator of her estate.
- The Queen is looking for a new clock winder - sorry, 'horological conservator' - to manage her collection fo over 1,000 clocks.
- A judge ruled that Mills would remain as the conservator of her estate.
- Likewise, a legally appointed guardian or conservator of an insane inventor may apply for and obtain a patent in trust for him.
- He thinks himself a great man because a great conservator of order.
- It is easy to be a conservator of the discomforts of others; indeed, it is only our good qualities we find it irksome to conserve.
- They were signed by father Fray Pedro de Muriel, by order of the judge conservator appointed to prevent the said visit.
- The judge-conservator proclaimed the cause at an end, and sentenced his province to be suppressed.