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Synonyms

chancellor

American  
[chan-suh-ler, -sler, chahn-] / ˈtʃæn sə lər, -slər, ˈtʃɑn- /

noun

  1. the chief minister of state in certain parliamentary governments, as in Germany; prime minister; premier.

  2. the chief administrative officer in certain American universities.

  3. a secretary, as to a king or noble or of an embassy.

  4. the priest in charge of a Roman Catholic chancery.

  5. the title of various important judges and other high officials.

  6. (in some states of the U.S.) the judge of a court of equity or chancery.

  7. British. the honorary, nonresident, titular head of a university.


chancellor British  
/ -slə, ˈtʃɑːnsələ /

noun

  1. the head of the government in several European countries

  2. the president of a university or, in some colleges, the chief administrative officer

  3. the honorary head of a university Compare vice chancellor

  4. (in some states) the presiding judge of a court of chancery or equity

  5. the chief secretary of an embassy

  6. Christianity a clergyman acting as the law officer of a bishop

  7. archaic the chief secretary of a prince, nobleman, etc

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

  • chancellorship noun
  • underchancellor noun

Etymology

Origin of chancellor

before 1100; Middle English chanceler < Anglo-French < Late Latin cancellārius doorkeeper, literally, man at the barrier ( chancel, -er 2 ); replacing Middle English canceler, Old English ≪ Late Latin, as above

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It is understood that the chancellor and prime minister chose to intervene to ensure the project would go ahead, in part to protect UK jobs.

From BBC

Starmer could also try to stave this off by reshuffling his cabinet—for instance, appointing a new more left-wing chancellor, analysts say.

From The Wall Street Journal

On Friday morning, Maggie and Leah were examined by this new committee of five men: a general, a lawyer, a judge, a state chancellor, and a doctor.

From Literature

Prof Graeme Roy, who chairs the commission, also explained that things could be worse if the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, had pushed her welfare reforms through the Westminster Labour group.

From BBC

Germany's chancellor has touched down in China as German businesses sound the alarm about a yawning trade imbalance.

From BBC