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Incumbent   /ɪnkˈəmbənt/   Listen
Incumbent

noun
1.
The official who holds an office.  Synonym: officeholder.
adjective
1.
Lying or leaning on something else.
2.
Necessary (for someone) as a duty or responsibility; morally binding.
3.
Currently holding an office.



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"Incumbent" Quotes from Famous Books



... deliberated the shopman displayed his wares, and felt it incumbent upon him to entertain ...
— The Horse-Stealers and Other Stories • Anton Chekhov

... am my own secretary, and have no reason for displacing the present incumbent. The library will suit you better ...
— The Bread-winners - A Social Study • John Hay

... all bad. He has a code, loose as it is, and acts up to it. It is real pain to him to be backward with a debt of honour (though I write it, how foolish the expression: as if all debts were not equally incumbent), but any tradesman may wait for years. He does not lie, except to save a woman's reputation (query—Is it then justifiable? I really don't know), but he exaggerates fearfully. Animal courage he has, but nothing of the moral attribute. Except as regards his egotism, personal and national, ...
— The Truth About America • Edward Money

... a remote period there have been two Kokuzo in theory, although but one incumbent. Two branches of the same family claim ancestral right to the office,—the rival houses of Senke and Kitajima. The government has decided always in favour of the former; but the head of the Kitajima family has usually ...
— Glimpses of an Unfamiliar Japan - First Series • Lafcadio Hearn

... Our incumbent was more attentive to his duties, or rather recognised more duties, than his predecessor. He preached on the subject, and formed classes, sixteen being then the limit of age,—since the idea of the vow, having become far more prominent than that of the blessing, it was held that full development ...
— Chantry House • Charlotte M. Yonge


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