˜yĐÄvlog

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resignee

[ ri-zahy-nee, ree-zahy-nee ]

noun

  1. a person who has resigned resigned or is about to resign.


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˜yĐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of resignee1

First recorded in 1605–15; resign + -ee
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

These were not just career Democrats either; resignee Danielle Sassoon, a U.S. attorney, was a decorated conservative who had just joined the Trump administration in January.

From

Greg Smith—the loudest resignee in Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s history—made sure of that.

From

So far, we have had four major resignations in the wake of the scandal: • Andy Coulson, Prime Minister's director of communications, Friday 21 January 2011 | full statement• Rebekah Brooks, News International chief executive, Friday 15 July, 2011 | • Les Hinton, CEO of Dow Jones & Company, Friday 15 July, 2011 | • Sir Paul Stephenson, Metropolitan police commissioner, Sunday 17 July 2011 | And with each statement, the language has been carefully planned and calibrated to say exactly what resignee wants to get across to the world.

From

Arguably, Stephenson - as the one resignee who didn't work for News Corp - had more he wanted to say and it possibly unbalances the comparison with the other statements Using ˜yĐÄvlogle.net, we've mapped each statement, above.

From

If Mr. Kroger Senior had been the only resignee, Cincinnatians, fond of their nation-spanning company, would have excused it on account of his 70 years and the need of aquiring a new wife, 36.

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More About Resignee

What doesĚýresignee mean?

A resignee is a person who has resigned or is in the process of resigning—quitting one’s job or giving up one’s position.

Resignee is fairly formal and isn’t commonly used. It’s most likely to be used in a legal context, such as by the human resources department to refer to a former employee. It can also be used to refer to a theoretical person, such as in a policy about resignees.

Example: It shouldn’t be the responsibility of the resignee to interview their replacement.

Where doesĚýresignee come from?

The first records of the word resignee come from the early 1600s. It is ultimately derived from the Latin verb °ůąđ˛őžą˛ľ˛ÔÄĺ°ůąđ, meaning “give up” or “unseal, invalidate, destroy.” In resignee, the suffix -ee indicates a person performing the action specified by the verb—in this case, the person resigning.

When used in the sense of leaving a position, resign is synonymous with quit, but the two words can imply different things. To say that someone quit their job often (though not always) implies that they left because they didn’t like something about it. Someone can resign due to negative circumstances, but the word itself doesn’t imply this without additional context. For example, a politician might resign due to a scandal, or an employee might resign to protest a policy they consider unethical. But resigning doesn’t always involve negative circumstances. A resignee might have resigned because they’re moving or they want to change their career.

A resignee is often said to have tendered their resignation.

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What are some other forms related to resignee?

  • resign (verb)
  • resigner (noun)

What are some words that share a root or word element with resignee?Ěý

Ěý

What are some words that often get used in discussing resignee?

How isĚýresignee used in real life?

Resignee is most commonly used in a legal or professional context. It’s not commonly used in everyday conversation.

Ěý

Ěý

Try usingĚýresignee!

Is resignee used correctly in the following sentence?

We need to fill the positions of several recent resignees.

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