chancellor

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A senior secretary or official with administrative or legal duties, sometimes in charge of some area of government such as finance or justice.
  2. Ellipsis of Chancellor of the Exchequer.
  3. The head of the government in some German-speaking countries.
  4. A senior record keeper of a cathedral; a senior legal officer for a bishop or diocese in charge of hearing cases involving ecclesiastical law.
  5. The head of a university, sometimes purely ceremonial.
  6. The foreman of a jury.
  7. The chief judge of a court of chancery (that is, one exercising equity jurisdiction).
  8. A fairy chess piece which combines the moves of the rook and the knight.
noun
  1. An honorific for the head of state in various German-speaking states.
  2. Ellipsis of Chancellor of the Exchequer.
name
  1. A surname.
  2. A hamlet in Wheatland County, Alberta, Canada, named after the Chancellor of Germany by settlers.
  3. A place in the United States:
  4. An unincorporated community in Geneva County, Alabama.
  5. A town in Turner County, South Dakota, named for Chancellor Otto von Bismarck.
  6. An unincorporated community in Spotsylvania County, Virginia.

Pronunciation

/ˈtʃɑːnsələ/ /ˈtʃɑːnslə/ /ˈt͡ʃænsələ/ /-lɚ/ /ˈt͡ʃænslɚ/ En-au-chancellor.ogg

Word forms

chancellor chancellors chanceler chanceller chancellour chancelor chancelour chaunceler chaunceller chauncellor chauncellour chauncelor chauncelour

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman or Middle English chaunceler, chanceler, canceler (“chief administrative or executive officer of a ruler; chancellor, secretary; private secretary, scribe; Lord Chancellor of England; officer of the ruler's exchequer; a high administrative or executive officer (for example, a deputy or representative of a bishop; the head of a university)”), from Old French cancelier, chancelier (“chancellor”), from Late Latin cancellārius (“secretary; doorkeeper, porter; usher of a court of law stationed at the bars separating the public from the judges”), from Latin cancellī (plural of cancellus (“grate; bars, barrier; railings”), diminutive of cancer (“grid; barrier”), from Proto-Italic *karkros (“enclosure”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ker- (“to bend, turn”)) + -ārius (suffix forming nouns denoting an agent of use). The word was present as Late Old English canceler, cancheler, from Norman cancheler, but was displaced in the 13th century by the Old French and Anglo-Norman forms mentioned above.

Translations

Arabic: مُسْتَشَار Arabic: مُسْتَشَارَة Armenian: կանցլեր Bulgarian: ка́нцлер Bulgarian: ка́нцлерка Catalan: canceller Czech: kancléř Danish: kansler Dutch: kanselier Esperanto: kanceliero Faroese: kanslari Finnish: kansleri Finnish: kansliapäällikkö French: chancelier French: chancelière German: Kanzler German: Kanzlerin Greek: καγκελάριος Greek: πρωτοσύγκελλος Hindi: चांसलर Hindi: चैंसेलर Icelandic: kanslari Indonesian: kanselir Irish: seansailéir Italian: cancelliere Latin: cancellārius Malay: canselor Manx: cormeyder Norwegian Bokmål: kansler Old English: canceler Portuguese: chanceler Romanian: cancelar Romanian: cancelară Russian: ка́нцлер Scottish Gaelic: seansalair Spanish: canciller Spanish: chanciller Spanish: cenceller (disused) Swahili: kansela Swedish: kansler Tigrinya: ቻንስለር Ukrainian: ка́нцлер Ukrainian: ка́нцлерка Welsh: canghellor
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.