nominating 的 2 个定义
nom·i·nat·ed, nom·i·nat·ing.
- to propose for appointment or election to an office.
- to appoint to a duty or office.
- to propose for an honor, award, or the like.
- (6)
- having a particular name.
nominating 近义词
designate, select
更多nominating例句
- The movie was also nominated for Best Picture and Peele was nominated for Best Director.
- Anyone can apply or nominate someone female or nonbinary for the speakers bureau.
- The governor’s office declined to answer questions about whether the governor was aware of them when he nominated Clarkson to his position in late 2018.
- Ross was once nominated to become Alaska attorney general, by then-Gov.
- Political analysts will sometimes recount how the Democrats, after losing three consecutive presidential elections, nominated Bill Clinton in 1992 and moved in a more centrist direction.
- And they would, it seems, nominate any movie—no matter how inane—to get those big-name butts in the seats.
- Drama schools were visited; members of the public were allowed to nominate themselves.
- The Stalwarts had bolted the Red Gym and were holding a shadow convention to nominate their own candidates at the opera house.
- Regardless, she's phenomenal, and it's egregious not to give her the Best Actress trophy, let alone not to even nominate her.
- A federal agency simply has to “nominate” you if it has “reasonable suspicion”—which is slightly more than a hunch.
- Thereon the major-general took on himself to nominate Prince Eugne as Murat's successor.
- The proposed plan embodied the appointment of a Gov.-General, who would nominate a Cabinet to act with him.
- George, however, wished to have the power to nominate a regent by an instrument revocable at pleasure.
- In resigning the presidency he thought it his duty to nominate a successor, and his choice was ratified by the meeting.
- After that term Fox suggested that the crown should nominate the commissioners, and meanwhile was to appoint to vacancies.