Definition of Auditorship. Meaning of Auditorship. Synonyms of Auditorship

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Auditorship. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Auditorship and, of course, Auditorship synonyms and on the right images related to the word Auditorship.

Definition of Auditorship

Auditorship
Auditorship Au"di*tor*ship, n. The office or function of auditor.

Meaning of Auditorship from wikipedia

- Auditor of the Imprests was a profitable office of the Exchequer, responsible for auditing the accounts of officers of the English crown to whom money...
- practical, Raj was innocent and sentimental. While Kumar went to study for auditorship in Chennai, Raj moved to Coimbatore to study in an engineering college...
- of the Treasury, with a grant to his nephew of the reversion of the Auditorship of the Exchequer. Shortly afterwards he died of an inflammation of his...
- (Shipyard) of the Navy, the Academy of Navy Guards, the Naval Hospital, the Auditorship, the Supreme Military Council, the powder plant, and others. The Brazilian-born...
- courses including "Security Checker Internship," "False Purpose Rundown Auditorship" and "Clear Certainty". In 2005, MSNBC characterized Feshbach as a "Senior...
- a deputy. He retired on full pension, 8 February 1749, retaining the auditorship of the tally office in the exchequer. It was through Haynes that William...
- Chase he was starting a new motion picture company and offered him the auditorship of the concern, which Chase immediately accepted. He was born in Churubusco...
- colony. He became the receiver general; the post was separated from the auditorship following his father's death. On September 12, 1709, nearly four year...
- in the 1983 Democratic primary by Ray Mabus. At the time he left the auditorship, the office was delinquent for 581 fiscal years worth of audits. King...
- doubt. He mistakenly believed that Lord Auckland intended to resign the auditorship of Greenwich Hospital, a place worth £100 p.a. which had been customarily...