I think that the appropriate word is chairman
yes i know one, lawn chair highchair chairman chairperson chairwoman
Neither, actually. "Chairman" is completely acceptable as a gender-neutral title. The "man" component of the word "chairman" is not referring to the male gender, but rather to a human. Despite its seemingly politically incorrect nature, "chairman" is the grammatically correct term.
It is not necessary to capitalize the word "chairperson." It is a common noun, not a proper noun.
Masculine and feminine refer to grammatical gender, and there is no grammatical gender in the English noun. Certain words specifically denote male or female persons, but chairman is not one of them. The -man (pronounced mun) in chairman is the same as the -man in woman. It certainly does not denote a male person.A female chairman is properly addressed as "Madame Chairman." There is a politically correct monstrosity with some currency among the ignorant, "chairwoman," but that word means "a woman who takes care of the chairs." Sometimes "Chair" is used alone, but again that is a genteelism, or a mistake made trying to avoid making a mistake.English used to have grammatical gender, but it had nothing to do with physical gender. The word "wife" was a neuter noun, not a feminine, for example. Grammatical gender is in the form of the word, and not its meaning.
Yes, the noun 'chairperson' is a common noun, a general word for a person who chairs a meeting.
No, the noun 'chairperson' is a common noun, a general word for a person who chairs a meeting.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'chairperson' is the name of the chairperson.
chairman=tagapangulo
Bossing
Chairmen.
Chairman
He became the non-executive chairman of betfair in march last year.
The vice chairman had to deputise for the chairman, who was too sick to chair an important meeting.