Dinghui
What's the difference between "official(noun)" and "officer"? They strengthened local party committees and experimented with voting for multicandidate party secretaries. They recruited more businesspeople and intellectuals into the party. They expanded party consultation with nonparty groups and made the Politburo’s proceedings more transparent. They improved feedback mechanisms within the party, implemented more meritocratic criteria for evaluation and promotion, and created a system of mandatory midcareer training for all 45 million state and party cadres. They enforced retirement requirements and rotated officials and military officers between job assignments every couple of years. I think these two words in the sentence both mean jobs, don't they? But what's the difference?
28 févr. 2017 18:44
Réponses · 4
The meanings of these two terms are quite subtle. The word ‘officer’ is comparatively specific, but its meaning varies somewhat according to context: - 1. A person of any rank and either gender in the police force – so a policeman or policewoman of the lowest rank (a constable) can very properly and politely be described as a police officer. 2. A person of superior rank in the armed forces – in the British army, anyone from a Second Lieutenant to a Field Marshall 3. A person with a named function in an organisation – for example, ‘This association has three officers: Chairman, Treasurer, and Secretary.’ The word ‘official’ is rather vague, but tends to mean an employee or staff member considered to have (or pretending to have) some importance, and generally working in a senior administrative capacity.
28 février 2017
Official usually refers to a management or supervisor position, while officer is most commonly used to refer to enforcement personnel such as policemen. Another difference is that official is more often used for civilian positions, while officer has rank or military connotations.
28 février 2017
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