Used in a Sentence

executives

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

Editorial note

Our key executives have been around the block, and understand the importance (and sustainability) of true work-life balance.

Examples16
Definitions3
Parts of speech1

Quick take

A chief officer or administrator, especially one who can make significant decisions on their own authority.

Meaning at a glance

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

noun

A chief officer or administrator, especially one who can make significant decisions on their own authority.

noun

The branch of government that is responsible for enforcing laws and judicial decisions, and for the day-to-day administration of the state.

noun

(computing) A process that coordinates and governs the action of other processes or threads; supervisor.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for executives.

noun

A chief officer or administrator, especially one who can make significant decisions on their own authority.

noun

The branch of government that is responsible for enforcing laws and judicial decisions, and for the day-to-day administration of the state.

noun

(computing) A process that coordinates and governs the action of other processes or threads; supervisor.

Example sentences

1

Our key executives have been around the block, and understand the importance (and sustainability) of true work-life balance.

2

This is just my biased opinion but the IT industry appears to have no shortage of child-like executives.

3

Except that the executives usually have automatic sales, to shield themselves from illegal insider trading.

4

Codifying what currently exists would make obvious what a boon it is for powerful executives.

5

A codification of what the public imagines exists, would never get past those executives' lobbyists.

6

The company executives were worried about Maemo eating into their fairly steady Symbian earnings, and so where reluctant to commit fully.

7

During those meetings it was Warner executives, not Jobs as is commonly thought, who suggested tracks be sold for 99 cents.

8

Pretending everyone must have equal ability and 50% of executives and 50% of programmers should be women doesn't get us anywhere.

9

Public performance in particular enables one to overcome lots of fears and be able to talk in front of both crowds and executives.

10

Nearly all executives trade in the securities of the corporations that employ them.

11

No one is better placed to dance right up to the line concerning investment decisions and public disclosure, than the firm's executives are.

12

When 3+ executives came from another company, as in the case of Damballa, I’ve drawn a link and marked it as such.

Quote examples

1

All this other expensive overhead is gone." But instead the executives choose to invest the company's would-be profits (and a little more) back into the company, in hopes that they will be even bigger later on.

2

That said, if the company has a lot of "sweetheart" deals just for the executives then you already know its a screwed up place and you might want to seek out a different place to accumulate value.

3

Nobody would be fighting for this man's freedom of speech if he littered the code with the word "nigger" or "lynching" One of the executives probably has a son or daughter who is a retard.

4

The view of "major executives" (and Alexander for that matter) in the first paragraph is so ludicrously naive and shallow that I'm forced to believe anything else author has to say is utter waste of my time.

Frequently asked questions

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

How do you use executives in a sentence?

Our key executives have been around the block, and understand the importance (and sustainability) of true work-life balance.

What does executives mean?

A chief officer or administrator, especially one who can make significant decisions on their own authority.

What part of speech is executives?

executives is commonly used as noun.