An assessor is a person who is employed to calculate the value of something, or the amount of money that should be paid, for example in tax. = appraiser
A person, usually an employee of, or an independent contractor for a taxing body who estimates the value of property for tax purposes Very often this value is not the fair market value
The individual appointed to carry out the formal assessment of candidate's performance against the occupational standard Assessors must be competent in the areas they are assessing and be qualified and registered with an Approved Centre The work-based assessor could be the candidate's employer/supervisor, a full time trainer or even someone otherwise independent of the company
A public official either appointed or elected to appraise property and place an assessed value on that property for the purpose of levying a property (ad valorem) tax
An assessor is a person who judges the performance of someone else, for example in an exam, at an interview or at a sporting event. One with special knowledge of a subject who is appointed or elected to assist a judge or magistrate in deciding a legal matter. In the U.S., the term also designates an official who evaluates property for the purposes of taxation. Assessors were appointed in the late 19th century throughout Europe to try to limit the influence of the jury system, which had been introduced in the wake of the French Revolution. Assessors thus represented a return to the civil-law traditions of Europe. In Britain and the U.S., assessors came to be used in labour and maritime courts as well as in some other civil jurisdictions
One appointed or elected to assist a judge or magistrate with his special knowledge of the subject to be decided; as legal assessors, nautical assessors