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relegated
[ rel-i-gey-tid ]
adjective
- sent or consigned to a lower position, place, or condition:
Over time, after the people’s uprising, reports of human rights violations became a relegated segment of evening news.
- (of a task or other matter) consigned or committed to someone to take care of:
Besides these relegated duties that the Chair performs on behalf of the committee, the Chair is also expected to keep abreast of new regulatory trends.
verb
- the simple past tense and past participle of relegate.
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³Ü²Ô·°ù±ð±ô·±ð·²µ²¹³Ù·±ð»å adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of relegated1
Example Sentences
Lawson, meanwhile, said the news he had been relegated was "tough to hear" but he is determined to "prove that I belong here in Formula 1" now he is back with his former team.
The final new face is at relegated Kent where former England One Day captain Adam Hollioake returns to county cricket, having won the title three times during his playing days with Surrey.
If Leicester are relegated again their maximum loss for their next accounts to include 2024-25 would be £83m, taking in two seasons in the Premier League and one in the Championship.
But the Saints are also battling to avoid becoming the 'earliest' team in Premier League history to be relegated.
More often than not, the significant transformations of law and policy that grew out of the response to 9/11 were relegated to the pages of history with little or no accountability.
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