Used in a Sentence

elector

Definitions, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for elector.

Editorial note

If you're not an Oregon elector, have you done any of these things in your state?

Examples16
Definitions4
Parts of speech1

Quick take

(politics) A person eligible to vote in an election; a member of an electorate, a voter.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of elector gathered in one view.

noun

(politics) A person eligible to vote in an election; a member of an electorate, a voter.

noun

(British, Commonwealth) A person eligible to vote to elect a Member of Parliament.

noun

(historical) A German prince entitled to elect the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire; a prince-elector.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for elector.

noun

(politics) A person eligible to vote in an election; a member of an electorate, a voter.

noun

(British, Commonwealth) A person eligible to vote to elect a Member of Parliament.

noun

(historical) A German prince entitled to elect the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire; a prince-elector.

noun

A member of an electoral college; specifically (US) an official selected by a state as a member of the Electoral College to elect the president and vice president of the United States.

Example sentences

1

If you're not an Oregon elector, have you done any of these things in your state?

2

There was no California for an elector to travel from to go to D.

3

Without those protections, layered elector systems could risk elite capture or reduced public legitimacy.

4

Most european so-called democracies lack representation of the elector, and we can thank the proportional list system for this.

5

Chicago judges are elected, and each election cycle, papers and blogs run horror stories about incompetent judges who no rational elector could vote for.

6

If not, how would an elector recognize his own ballot?

7

The model of electing an emperor from the princes of each elector state holds some similarity is also somewhat significant in my opinion, though democratically much different.

8

- Arrest of newly elected officials as illegitimate, and the seating of Republican candidates instead, similar to the fake elector scheme from 2020.

9

> to an elector tree like the old US Senate rather than direct voting for too many positions I mentioned this.

10

It assumes the elector can recognize the quirks of the signature of the trustee, yet it also assumes that the trustee can not do this (for lack of having a copy of his signature).

11

The short of it is that being qualified to become such an elector is a broader category than actually being on the electoral roll - you don't need to be on the roll to run for the Senate, just meet the basic requirements in S93.

12

I figure you could easily have 1 direct representative per 1,000 people if you change the system to an elector tree like the old US Senate rather than direct voting for too many positions.

Quote examples

1

Elector magazine used to prank too; my favourite one was their "solar powered pocket torch." It wasn't rechargeable.

2

The relevancy of S94 and S94A for overseas electors is established in Interpretation, 4(1): ""Eligible overseas elector" means an elector who is entitled under section 94 or 95 to be treated as an eligible overseas elector."

3

He might run afoul of s95(1B): "An application that is made after the elector ceased to reside in Australia must be made within 3 years after the day on which the elector ceased to reside in Australia."

4

"Elector selection" would be immediately subject to strong pressure from monied interests.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use elector in a sentence?

If you're not an Oregon elector, have you done any of these things in your state?

What does elector mean?

(politics) A person eligible to vote in an election; a member of an electorate, a voter.

What part of speech is elector?

elector is commonly used as noun.