Seats in the Senate are reappointed every four years. Seats in the House of Representatives are reappointed every two years.
Your question is unclear. Who is being reappointed? What position are you talking about?
Here are some: jointed pointed anointed disjointed disappointed reappointed
they are not reappointed every ten years... that would be immunization house of senate members are reappointed every 6 years house of representative members are reappointed every 2 years
101 if you count John Rutledge and Charles Evans Hughes twice as they were appointed left the court then were reappointed.
Congress works on a cycle, the house of representatives are elected every two years, and the senate every six years on a two year cycle, creating a third of the house elected each year.
The idea is that they will not be vulnerable to any kind of pressure from anyone, since they do not have to be reelected or reappointed, and therefore they can make their legal rulings based purely on what they honestly believe is right.
Current Chief Justice is the most famous chief justice of Pakistan. He was expelled by the former President, Pervaiz Musharraf but was reappointed by the Prime Minister receiving extreme public pressure.
Boards vary in size from five to nineteen members, many with only one public member. In some jurisdictions, there is a limited term of service whereas in others, board members can be reappointed indefinitely
US magistrate judges are appointed by a majority vote of the federal district judges of that particular district and serve terms of eight years if full-time, or four years if part-time, and may be reappointed.
When you resign, you're resigning your commission. If they're simply resigning to transfer to a reserve component, they would keep their commission. Otherwise, they're no longer commissioned officers. For Marines, we have to request a reserve commission. It is not automatically given. Your name is sent back in front of the US Senate and reappointed a reserve officer.
In most jurisdictions, civil judges are appointed for a specific term rather than being hired or fired like employees. They can be removed from office through a formal process such as impeachment, disciplinary action, or not being reappointed at the end of their term.