The US elected official is the Vice President, without a hyphen. Both hyphenated and unhyphenated variants exist for similar business positions. The hyphen is more often seen in the adjective form vice-presidential.
The 25th President of the US was William McKinley (served 1897-1901, killed in office and succeeded by his second Vice President, Theodore Roosevelt).
The likely word is the plural noun potatoes (the singular of which, potato, Vice President Dan Quayle could apparently not spell correctly).
You can capitalize both.But you may only capitalize either of them if talking about a specific president or a specific vice chancellor.For example, if you are talking about "The President of the United States" that would be capitalized as it is specific and not general. Or if you were talking about, say, "President Obama" it would capitalized as you are speaking specifically about an actual president. Now, if you were to say, "When I grow up, I'm going to be the president!" It would not be capitalized because you are not specifically speaking of one certain president.Same thing for vice chancellor. If it is speaking of a specific person, it would become capitalized. If not, and you're simply saying something like said before. For example, "When I grow up, I'm going to be the vice chancellor of...!" And so forth. Other than that, vice chancellor would remain lower cased and not capitalized.
"veep" is a vocalization of the letters v.p., which stand for vice-president
The Civil War general and 18th President of the US was Ulysses S. Grant.
Dan Quayle, vice president under George Herbert Walker Bush, was infamous for this misspelling.
* President * Vice-president* President * Vice-president* President * Vice-president* President * Vice-president* President * Vice-president* President * Vice-president
Dan Quayle, VP under George Bush.
That is the correct spelling of "elector", a voter or voting representative, especially those chosen to elect a US President and Vice President.
Vice President
The 25th President of the US was William McKinley (served 1897-1901, killed in office and succeeded by his second Vice President, Theodore Roosevelt).
vice president until presidents term is up.
The vice president is selected by the canidates and if they win the vice president they chose becomes vice president.
The likely word is the plural noun potatoes (the singular of which, potato, Vice President Dan Quayle could apparently not spell correctly).
The Vice President is the President of the Senate.
vice president
vice president