What's the difference between supervisor and supervisory?
Supervisor
Definition:
(n.) One who supervises; an overseer; an inspector; a superintendent; as, a supervisor of schools.
(n.) A spectator; a looker-on.
Example Sentences:
(1) It appeared that ratings by supervisors were influenced primarily by the interpersonal skills of the residents and secondarily by ability.
(2) Herman Van Rompuy, the European Council president chairing the summit, hoped to finesse an overall agreement on the banking supervisor.
(3) Other findings showed highly satisfactory to above average performance of graduates whether based on residency supervisors' evaluations or self-evaluations and higher ratings for the graduates who selected surgery residency programs than for those pursuing other disciplines.
(4) We reviewed the routines for providing information on drugs, and for training in the use of drugs and aids to medication in hospital and nursing homes by interviewing 11 ward supervisors.
(5) The authors compared supervisors' global and specific item ratings of psychiatric residents' performance in each of three years of training with ratings of these applicants prior to their admission to the program.
(6) Mentoring relationships experienced by Army Nurse Corps officers in head nurse or nursing supervisor roles were examined via a survey questionnaire.
(7) Respondents' perceptions of their supervisors' style adaptability were positively and significantly correlated with their perceptions of work-unit effectiveness.
(8) 34% of the house officers had an appointed supervisor compared with 54% in primary care.
(9) Later they were also assigned to interdisciplinary inpatient teams led by community psychiatry supervisors.
(10) The nerd may have been more in evidence early on - not least when he was doing his doctorate and ignored the advice of his Nobel prize-winning supervisor, Nikolaas Tinbergen, and opted for a stats fest, "a classic piece of Popperian science", instead of a fluffier study of animal behaviour - but it's still around.
(11) The leader of such a supervisors' group can be more helpful if he will see himself as a facilitator of essentially peer group observations rather than a transference interpreter or group teacher.
(12) Data published by the Committee of European Banking Supervisors (CEBS) showed that the banks were only forced to simulate losses on sovereign debt that they held for trading purposes and not for bonds they might hold to maturity on their banking books.
(13) The most pronounced finding was the importance of supervisors being pharmacists: satisfaction on five of six satisfaction subscales was related to whether one's supervisor was a pharmacist.
(14) Shapla has found a job at another factory but, due to her back injuries, as a sewing-machine operator, not a supervisor.
(15) Administrators, supervisors, and staff must be involved in this important process to attract and retain new as well as experienced nurses.
(16) Mohamed Saleh, the security supervisor for the Al Masry club, claimed that he too noticed people in the crowd whom he described as "strangers".
(17) Variables within the referring analyst, patient, candidate, and supervisor are examined in their interaction with the circumstances of the assessment enterprise.
(18) A nursery supervisor with smear- and culture-positive pulmonary tuberculosis and a productive cough exposed 528 newborns over a three-month period before her disease was diagnosed.
(19) Combining the data from cutaneous malignant melanoma over both sexes and both registries the occupations with the highest incidence ratios (expressed as a percentage) were: airline pilots, incidence ratio (IR) = 273, (95% confidence limits 118-538); finance and insurance brokers IR = 245 (140-398); professional accountants IR = 208 (134-307); dentists IR = 207 (133-309); inspectors and supervisors in transport IR = 206 (133-304); pharmacists IR = 198 (115-318); professionals not elsewhere classified IR = 196 (155-243); judges IR = 196 (126-289); doctors IR = 188 (140-248); university teachers IR = 188 (110-302); and chemists IR = 188 (111-296).
(20) The radical, yet promising approach of eliminating evening and night shift nursing supervisors is discussed.
Supervisory
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to supervision; as, supervisory powers.
Example Sentences:
(1) While the new ECB regime will apply to all of the eurozone, non-euro countries can also come under the system without gaining voting rights in the new ECB supervisory board.
(2) Several striking differences between the employment profiles of male and female physical therapists were identified, including: 1) men were more likely to be self-employed, 2) men were more likely to hold supervisory positions, and 3) men tended to have significantly higher incomes even when compared to women with similar employment characteristics.
(3) All residents are evaluated by supervisory faculty after each clinical rotation.
(4) Regulatory and supervisory coverage should follow the principle of economic substance not legal form.
(5) Perceptions of supervisor and peer behavior during teaching clinic conferences, a group supervisory approach, were assessed.
(6) One hundred ninety-seven managerial employees completed a survey composed of 20 skill dimensions pertinent to supervisory positions in the mining industry.
(7) Information from the health center and community levels is, however, also of interest particularly in managing and directing supervisory activities.
(8) Hildebrand had been due to appear before the parliamentary economics committee alongside the head of the SNB's supervisory council, Hansueli Raggenbass, who is also under pressure over the affair.
(9) A new, proactive supervisory approach towards the City is promised, focused on outcomes rather than a tick-box culture.
(10) The investigation into market manipulation, initiated by a complaint on behalf of the German federal financial supervisory agency BaFin , is focusing on two former VW executives, including Winterkorn, who resigned in September after eight years at the helm.
(11) The authors examine the origins of the paradoxes and the reactions of residents to each, and describe how the supervisory relationships of the training setting can be used to resolve them.
(12) He feels the women would not do the work competently, and that it is the supervisory doctors who would suffer through lawsuits and damaged reputations.
(13) "Yeah ... but I was calling on the rest of the world all the time to create a global supervisory regime."
(14) An Independent Adjudicating Panel will act as the overall ethical supervisory body for the study and will retain the randomization code.
(15) It recommends an independent supervisory board for HMRC , consisting of stakeholders appointed by the chancellor, to “act as a bulwark against corporate capture and inertia”.
(16) It was the purpose of this study to further assure that the minocycline induced brainstem vertigo is due to a destabilization of a supervisory gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic loop from the archeocerebellum upon the pontomedullary vestibular regulating pathways.
(17) The three parts are self-appraisal and goal setting, peer evaluation, and supervisory evaluation.
(18) If you approve as a member of a supervisory board financial accounts which you know that 2 million are not accrued you have possibly done a falsification of a document.
(19) The women with higher educational levels, supervisory positions, and increased responsibility (26.1%) more often played an active role during coitus, had a higher capacity for orgasm, and maintained that sexuality remained unchanged during menopause, yet they reported a declining frequency of sexual encounters, even before menopause.
(20) The main issues revolved around new regimes and institutions to help stabilise the euro longer term by enabling the use of bailout funds to shore up weak banks directly as well as putting the eurozone's banks under a new single supervisory agency, the European Central Bank.