English to Urdu Dictionary appoint

appoint

تقرر
definition
verb
she has been appointed to the board
assign a job or role to (someone).
they appointed a day in May for the meeting
determine or decide on (a time or a place).
translation of 'appoint '
verb
مقرر کرنا
example
The first of these, the external or political kingdom of Christ in the visible church, consists in his absolute and supreme authority, to 'appoint' the laws of his church, and rulers by these laws.
trustees 'appoint' the capital to the beneficiaries
As His sovereignty extends to His worship, so it is His sole prerogative to 'appoint' the laws of His worship, to command of His subjects the way they ought to worship Him.
So, our submission has always been that that is a beneficial interest in the sense that he has the ability through control of the trustee company to 'appoint' corpus or income to himself.
On a document being tabled, a motion may be moved without notice to 'appoint' a day for its consideration or for it to be printed.
The nephew had no child but purported to 'appoint' the property by will.
‘Let us now 'appoint' the laws by which our country may remain in peace.’
trustees 'appoint' the capital to the beneficiaries
However, I missed a recent test, because I forgot to 'appoint' a time that I would take it.
Complaints against decisions pertaining to assemblies shall be filed directly to the Supreme Administrative Court within 3 days of the date of delivery of the decision concerned; unless hindered from doing so by formal obstacles, the Court shall 'appoint' the date of the hearing no later than within 7 days of the date of filing the complaint.
It isn't as though the Ambassador issued a decree saying ‘I 'appoint' such and such.’
In my view this document carries greater weight than others cited in the inquiry, for example the Tithe maps because it discharged an express obligation to set out and 'appoint' roads.
The surviving spouse must have a power of appointment to 'appoint' the property to the survivor's own self or estate.
Receivers and managers in the case of insolvency regularly fail to obtain indemnities from their 'appointers' but look usually only to the assets.
He was 'appointed' to this promotional role because of his high profile in the community.
His first official honorary consultant post came in 1946 when he was 'appointed' to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital.
He was 'appointed' to chair the council's health committee in 1985 and was instrumental in the opening of the reserve's health centre.
I am a Welshman who is as proud today of being national team manager as I was on the day I was 'appointed' to the job.
So I don't see anything in that that is any different from any other 'appointee' of any other administration at any other time.
She was 'appointed' to the Court of Justice in October 1999.
As a result, completely inappropriate people are 'appointed' to rather important jobs.
He was 'appointed' to head the new merged ‘supertrust’, which covers an area of 4,500 square miles, in May 1999.
After all, you're a political 'appointee' in a presidential administration during an election year.
And she was 'appointed' to this case, paid $3,280, including expenses.
People are 'appointed' to different jobs within a division of labour.
The new 'appointees' officially took up their positions in late January.
Local billeting officers were 'appointed' to find suitable homes for evacuees and they set about interviewing possible hosts.
The process by which people are 'appointed' to inquiries appears wholly opaque, raising the suspicion that politicians appoint people who will give them the result they want.
This weakens the potential for presidents to rely on their political 'appointees' as agents of presidential control of the bureaucracy.
All we can say in relation to his appointment is that he applied for the job, we took up his references and he was 'appointed' to the post after due process.
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