What's the difference between supervisory and warden?

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.

Warden


Definition:

  • (n.) A keeper; a guardian; a watchman.
  • (n.) An officer who keeps or guards; a keeper; as, the warden of a prison.
  • (n.) A head official; as, the warden of a college; specifically (Eccl.), a churchwarden.
  • (n.) A large, hard pear, chiefly used for baking and roasting.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The warden threatened to have her killed by other inmates.
  • (2) The cuts affect a wide spectrum of projects: youth offending teams will shrink, probation staff numbers will dwindle, refugee advice centres will halve in size, Sure Start services will disappear, domestic violence centres will have to restrict the number of people they can help, HIV-prevention schemes will end, lollipop wardens will no longer be funded, help for women with postnatal depression will vanish, a work scheme for people who are registered blind will be wound down, day centres for street drinkers will close their doors, theatres will get less money, debt advice services will have fewer people available to help, fire stations will shut.
  • (3) Renal blood flow was partially autoregulated after oil blockade of tubules, as indicated by a mean autoregulation index (Semple-de Wardener (1959) of 0-5.
  • (4) Without the team these people would not have become known to the responsible authorities until families, neighbours, and wardens became unable to cope.
  • (5) Police say child B was discovered by a street warden near Kisanga's east London flat on November 24, 2003.
  • (6) Asked about the plan, Baker said on Monday that "both sides of the coalition" wanted high streets to prosper and that he agreed that over-zealous action by traffic wardens could be a problem.
  • (7) The five-day event brings America’s prison industry, wardens, county officials and lobbyists under one roof .
  • (8) Warden Anita Trammell said she thought Lockett spoke.
  • (9) If I'm a successful warden and I do my job and we correct the deviant behaviour, then we should have a parole hearing.
  • (10) There is no Warden Norton pocketing brown envelopes in this instance.
  • (11) After daily injections of melanocyte stimulating hormone (MSH), MSH-release inhibiting factor (MIF), or diluent albino rats ran a 12 choice Warden maze for a palatable food reward.
  • (12) In Cover Her Face , the victim is an unmarried mother, charitably employed by the mistress of the manor (the house is still in family hands) as a parlourmaid, on the commendation of the warden of a refuge for "delinquent" girls.
  • (13) I saw traffic wardens, shop assistants, and waiters subjected to rudeness and worse, by people who were clearly loaded.
  • (14) A pilot project in New York City, which designed and implemented a first-response capability for medical emergencies in corporations, using employees in a system congruent with the fire warden plans in effect, was completed in May 1977.
  • (15) It can feel proud of itself, and its former warden.
  • (16) A small, fluorescent traffic warden took him by the hand and led him gently away.
  • (17) Prison wardens have now reportedly eased some of their regulations, prompting Alyokhina to end her fast.
  • (18) During harvest season, many of the boys and girls in the camp will go to work at the nearby farms for as little as $2 (£1.30) a day, said Abu Mohammed, the camp warden.
  • (19) A nurse working in sheltered housing where wardens have been removed told the Guardian: "I have residents who sit in their nightclothes all day because they cannot afford the alternative.
  • (20) One of the wardens resulted anti-HTLV III positive whilst 14 appeared to have been infected by HBV.

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