my senior medical officer taking four days casual leave left the station 45 days ago.he is now leave on medical ground!how can he handover the charge to me during his leave period?
The plural form is... 'officers in charge'.
OIC
The fraudulent appropriation of property by a person to whom it has been intrusted; as, the embezzlement by a clerk of his employer's; embezzlement of public funds by the public officer having them in charge.
To take charge of a situation means to take responsibility in what you are doing. Whether you are the leader or another participant in a plan of action, you stand firmly behind your beliefs and always put your best effort forward.
Depends on the ship, and on the purpose. For commercial ships, there used to be a "sailing master" who was in charge of how the ship was operated, but not where you were going. The First Officer or First Mate may be the safest answer for that. The Navigator was in charge of the navigation, and for commercial passenger vessels, the Purser was directly responsible to the Captain for the welfare of the passengers and cargo. For modern military vessels, the Executive Officer is the #2 guy in just about everything. When entering or leaving port, the Captain typically yields control to the Harbor Pilot.
The differents between handover and turnover, handover mean the person accept duties and responsibilities/ to take charge .while turn over is the person give duties and responsilities .
The plural form is... 'officers in charge'.
The officer can only make decisions on whether to arrest, cite, or not to arrest, referred to as officer discretion. The officer cannot (honestly) promise leniency of a charge because they do not have that authority. Charges are filed and issued by a prosecutor, not a police officer. Any statements given to a police officer based on a "promise of leniency" without the prosecutor's cooperation will be considered coerced and inadmissible.
the opposite of subordinate. Basically, it means "in charge of" or "more important than".
Officer in charge is just a general term used to describe the officer who has authority over a specific situation. It can refer to many thing - an officer in charge of a specific criminal or traffic case, the officer who is in charge of a division's station house at a specific point in time, or even a command officer in charge of a specific event. This term does not reflect or describe any one specific rank.
The Tagalog term for "officer-in-charge" is "opisyal sa tungkulin."
OIC
A Train Officer
A General.
OIC
Misdemeanor charge yes. Felony charge very doubtful.
Eod officer