Yüksek atlamadaki 2.45'lik dünya rekorunun sahibi olan ve 1992 Olimpiyat Oyunları'nda bu dalda altın madalya kazanan ünlü Kübalı atlet
Englisch - Englisch
Definition von mayor im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
The leader of a city, or a municipality, sometimes just a figurehead and sometimes a powerful position. In some countries, the mayor is elected by the citizens or by the city council
The elected or appointed head of a municipal government, usually the chief administrative official but sometimes a largely ceremonial figure having little executive authority
The mayor of a town or city is the person who has been elected to represent it for a fixed period of time or, in some places, to run its government. Political leader of a municipal corporation. Mayors are either appointed or elected for a limited term. In Europe until the mid-19th century, most mayors were appointed by the central government; in France, they are still agents of the central government. In the U.S., they are either directly elected by the populace or chosen by an elected council. Some fulfill only ceremonial functions, executive power being held by a professional manager hired by the legislature. A mayor's powers may include the power to make appointments, veto legislation, administer budgets, and manage administrative functions. See also city government
The Mayor's role vis-a-vis the Public Art Program should be as Ex-Officio Head of the Public Art Commission
(Edebiyat) The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) is a tragic novel by English author Thomas Hardy subtitled, "The Life and Death of a Man of Character". It is set in the fictional town of Casterbridge (based on the town of Dorchester in Dorset). The book is one of Hardy's Wessex novels, all set in a fictional rustic England
a banquet (=formal dinner) held in the Guildhall, London, every year after the new Lord Mayor of London has been elected. Many important people are invited to this banquet, including the Prime Minister, who makes a speech to mark the occasion
[ mA-&r, me(-&)r, esp ] (noun.) 14th century. {c. 1300} * From Old French maire (“head of a city or town government”) (13th century), from Latin maior (“bigger, greater, superior”), comparative of magnus (“big, great”).