Appointment: Difference between revisions
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*An '''appointment of clergy''', in Christianity, is made by a bishop to a particular ministry setting, particularly in denominations which practice [[episcopal polity|episcopal]] forms of church government and polity (such as Anglicanism and United Methodism.) Typically, a pastor is appointed to a particular church or parish. |
*An '''appointment of clergy''', in Christianity, is made by a bishop to a particular ministry setting, particularly in denominations which practice [[episcopal polity|episcopal]] forms of church government and polity (such as Anglicanism and United Methodism.) Typically, a pastor is appointed to a particular church or parish. |
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*Appointment is used to describe a system of selecting candidates in which the choice is made by an individual or panel rather than by a poll of the populace in general (election), or through random selection (allotment/sortition) as used to select juries. |
*Appointment is used to describe a system of selecting candidates in which the choice is made by an individual or panel rather than by a poll of the populace in general (election), or through random selection (allotment/sortition) as used to select juries. |
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*It is also used to describe the feeling of being excited about something; the opposite of disappointment. |
*It is also used to describe the feeling of being excited about something; the opposite of [[disappointment]]. |
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Revision as of 22:17, 10 May 2010
Appointment may refer to a number of things, including the following:
Look up appointment in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
- An appointment is a time reserved for something such as a doctor visit, much like a reservation.
- An appointment, in government refers to the assignment of a person by an official to perform a duty, such as a presidential appointment of a judge to a court. This may also happen for an office which is normally elected, but has an unexpected vacancy. A person appointed but not yet in office is a designee.
- The power of appointment, in law, is the ability of a testator to select another person to dispose of the testator's property.
- An appointment of clergy, in Christianity, is made by a bishop to a particular ministry setting, particularly in denominations which practice episcopal forms of church government and polity (such as Anglicanism and United Methodism.) Typically, a pastor is appointed to a particular church or parish.
- Appointment is used to describe a system of selecting candidates in which the choice is made by an individual or panel rather than by a poll of the populace in general (election), or through random selection (allotment/sortition) as used to select juries.
- It is also used to describe the feeling of being excited about something; the opposite of disappointment.