English to Spanish Dictionary tenure

tenure

tenencia
definition
verb
I had recently been tenured and then promoted to full professor
give (someone) a permanent post, especially as a teacher or professor.
noun
But without exception, these big operations use leased land, with tenures typically of two to five years.
the conditions under which land or buildings are held or occupied.
his tenure of the premiership would be threatened
the holding of an office.
translation of 'tenure'
noun
posesión,
permanencia,
numerario,
ocupación,
tenencia
example
I think we've got in Australia casuals where their average 'tenure' in their current employment is 2.6 years.
Bocsh's Jimmy Carter will probably not alter the way we look at the 39th president's 'tenure' in office, but it is a well-crafted bio.
During his 'tenure' , the university experienced its most expansive period of growth.
There isn't a way it would be possible for any person to be ‘banned from getting 'tenure' at any Canadian university.’
These single teachers taught an average of 12 years, raising the average 'tenure' of teachers.
A successful bid would make Hashimoto only the second postwar premier to return to office after a break in his 'tenure' .
Because he's a lowly adjunct professor who can't even dream of a full professorship let alone 'tenure' , he discovers that neither side will have him.
Generally, they are marginal and powerless people, often with no security of land 'tenure' and inhabiting mainly the upland areas.
East Texas Baptist University currently does not have a system of academic 'tenure' .
Do I become a faculty member in a University, get a 'tenure' , become an Associate Professor and then a Full Professor, publish useless articles, and die?
And if she runs, the controversies of her past and the scars of her husband's Oval Office 'tenure' would be fully revisited.
Conditions in Tanzania were further complicated by a system of laws that redefined land 'tenure' and property relations based on socialism.
We may not finish the job during my 'tenure' in office; but we must, so we will, stay the course and make good progress.
his 'tenure' of the premiership would be threatened
So much of what you read and hear in the States is born out of a need for academics to be published in order to keep their 'tenure' at universities.
College/university music teachers have 'tenure' , rank and their employer's standards that provide professional status for them.
And then later, during his 'tenure' in office, Prime Minister Rabin did freeze settlements.
Three types of land tenure occur: regular landed property; hereditary 'tenure' or long lease; and the renting of government grounds.
Harris' 'tenure' as Ontario Premier has seen many successes, but has not been without controversy.
The unions are spending a boatload of money to protect their paycheck deduction for dues and to fight against extending the time to get teacher 'tenure' .
Reportedly, he was one of the first African-Americans without a college degree to get 'tenure' at a major university.
Newly divorced and up for 'tenure' at Washington State University, she was faced with trying to eke out a living for herself and her two daughters on an assistant professor's salary.
In most disciplines at large research universities, 'tenure' is directly related to the number of peer-reviewed books and articles one publishes.
During his 'tenure' at Oxford University, he belonged to a group called the inklings, which also included the author C.S. Lewis.
It motivated the expulsion; it financed the colonization; it secured the property rights by which peasants came to hold land in fee-simple 'tenure' .
And people have been denied admission to the university, or denied 'tenure' , or didn't get their degrees, all due to their sex since then?
By the end of his long 'tenure' , the office had established itself as one of the most important in the realm.
In urban areas, however, the choice of space is limited because of the restricted availability of houses and the nature of freehold land 'tenure' .
The chair or department head should not have tenure in office; 'tenure' as a faculty member is a matter of separate right.
Compare, for example, the probationary period endured by an assistant professor before gaining 'tenure' with that of an assembly line worker in the automotive sector.
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