A representative can be an agent, delegate, factor, intermediate, intermediary, surrogate, go-between, or proxy.
The verb could be to delegate, assign, appoint, or deputize.
Yes, "allege" does have a root word. It comes from the Latin word "allegare," which means "to send a person as a representative."
Yes, the noun 'representative' is a common noun; a general word for someone who serves as a delegate or agent; a general word for a person or thing that serves as an example or type for others of the same classification; a word for any representative of any kind.The word 'representative' is also an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.
(adjective) The sample is representative of the specimens we gathered. (noun) We will send a representative to the student council meeting.
Yes, the word representative is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for a a typical example of a group, class, or quality; one that represents another or others; a word for a person or a thing.The word representative is also an adjective, used to describe a noun: a representative example:
representative
The possessive form of the singular noun representative is representative's.example: The representative's appointment is at four.
Representative
Opposites of the word representative: atypical, different, uncharacteristic, unrepresentative
Right of legation
The root word "mitt" comes from the Latin word "mittō," which means "to send" or "to let go." It is commonly used in English to refer to a type of glove typically used in baseball.
No, the word "representative" is not a compound word. It is a single word that is made up of the root word "represent" with the suffix "-ative" added to it.
Our records show on April 04, 2013 we received the signed Letters of Authority naming you as the Personal Representative of the estate.