tenure
n. 占有(职位,不动产等); 占有期; 终身职位
Tenure is the legal right to live in a particular building or to use a particular piece of land during a fixed period of time.
Lack of security of tenure was a reason for many families becoming homeless.
居住权得不到保证是许多家庭居无定所的一个原因。
Tenure is the period of time during which someone holds an important job.
...the three-year tenure of President Bush...
布什总统的三年任期
He was in the middle of his tenure as Oxford Professor of Poetry and at the height of his fame.
当时,他在牛津担任诗歌教授的聘期刚到一半,声誉正隆。
If you have tenure in your job, you have the right to keep it until you retire.
Junior staff have only a slim chance of getting tenure.
初级职员得到终身职位的机会十分渺茫。
1. the term during which some position is held
2. the right to hold property; part of an ancient hierarchical system of holding lands
1. give life-time employment to;
security of tenure
保有权,占有权
见前面义项3
Tenure means a permanent appointment.
终身任期意味着永久性任职.
If you think your teacher wait till you get a boss . He doesn't have tenure.
假如你认为你的老师严肃,等你有了老板再这样想. 老板可是没有任期限期的.
During his tenure at the college, Mr. Wang always pulled his own weight.
王先生在大学服务期间, 都很负责合作.
To complicate matters further, once a faculty member has been granted tenure he is functionally autonomous.
为了使事情变得更错综复杂, 一旦某位教师被授予了终身教授资格,他就自治了.
Salaries can also be tied to something else? tenure, more about that next week.
工资也会和其它一些东西挂钩,比如任期等, 更多的情况我们将在下周介绍.