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government
[guhv-ern-muhnt, ‑er-muhnt]
noun
the political direction and control exercised over the actions of the members, citizens, or inhabitants of communities, societies, and states; direction of the affairs of a state, community, etc.; political administration.
Government is necessary to the existence of civilized society.
the form or system of rule by which a state, community, etc., is governed.
monarchical government; episcopal government.
the governing body of persons in a state, community, etc.; administration.
a branch or service of the supreme authority of a state or nation, taken as representing the whole.
a dam built by the government.
(in some parliamentary systems, as that of the United Kingdom)
the particular group of persons forming the cabinet at any given time.
The prime minister has formed a new government.
the parliament along with the cabinet.
The government has fallen.
direction; control; management; rule.
the government of one's conduct.
a district governed; province.
Grammar., the extablished usage that requires that one word in a sentence should cause another to be of a particular form.
the government of the verb by its subject.
government
/ ˌɡʌvəˈmɛntəl, ˌɡʌvənˈmɛntəl, ˈɡʌvənmənt, ˈɡʌvəmənt /
noun
the exercise of political authority over the actions, affairs, etc, of a political unit, people, etc, as well as the performance of certain functions for this unit or body; the action of governing; political rule and administration
the system or form by which a community, etc, is ruled
tyrannical government
the executive policy-making body of a political unit, community, etc; ministry or administration
yesterday we got a new government
( capital when of a specific country )
the British Government
the state and its administration
blame it on the government
( as modifier )
a government agency
regulation; direction
grammar the determination of the form of one word by another word
Grammar Note
Pronunciation Note
Other Word Forms
- governmental adjective
- governmentally adverb
- countergovernment noun
- nongovernment noun
- nongovernmental adjective
- pro-government adjective
- regovernment noun
- semigovernmental adjective
- semigovernmentally adverb
- subgovernment noun
- undergovernment noun
- ungovernmental adjective
- ungovernmentally adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of government1
Example Sentences
He drew parallels to the 1963 assassination of John F Kennedy and his recent orders to release more government documents.
This reshuffle amounts to the action of a prime minister confronted by an almighty mess - and hurriedly seeking to seize that moment for his own and his government's ends.
Created by an act of Parliament, it would need to be a UK government decision to bring the institution to an end.
The party has long claimed it will be able to make considerable government savings from entirely scrapping attempts by the government to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050.
You can learn more about the Labour MPs who are in key positions in the government in the short biographies below of each member of the cabinet and the ministers who attend its meetings.
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