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quaestorenUK
quaes·tor Q0010500 (kwĕs′tər, kwē′stər)n. Any of various public officials in ancient Rome responsible for finance and administration in various areas of government and the military. [Middle English questor, from Latin quaestor, from *quaestus, obsolete past participle of quaerere, to inquire.] quaes·to′ri·al (kwĕ-stôr′ē-əl, kwē-) adj.quaes′tor·ship′ n.quaestor (ˈkwiːstə; -tɔː) or questorn1. (Law) any of several magistrates of ancient Rome, usually a financial administrator2. (Historical Terms) any of several magistrates of ancient Rome, usually a financial administrator[C14: from Latin, from quaerere to inquire] quaestorial adj ˈquaestorˌship nquaes•tor or ques•tor (ˈkwɛs tər, ˈkwi stər) n. 1. any of various public magistrates in ancient Rome with chiefly financial responsibilities. 2. one of two officials serving as public prosecutors in certain criminal cases in early Rome. [1350–1400; < Latin quaes-, base of quaerere to seek] quaes•to′ri•al (-ˈstɔr i əl, -ˈstoʊr-) adj. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | quaestor - any of several public officials of ancient Rome (usually in charge of finance and administration)finance - the branch of economics that studies the management of money and other assetsfunctionary, official - a worker who holds or is invested with an office | Translations
quaestorenUK
quaestor (kwĕs`tôr), Roman magistrate, with responsibility for the treasury; in early times a quaestor also had judicial powers. At first there were two quaestors. Sulla named 20, and Caesar set 40 as the number (45 B.C.), but Augustus reduced them to 20. Quaestors were in theory deputies for consuls, praetors, or proconsuls. A quaestorship was the first magistracy sought by an ambitious young man.QuaestorenUK Related to Quaestor: aedile, ÆdileQUAESTOR. The name of a magistrate of ancient Rome. quaestorenUK Related to quaestor: aedile, ÆdileWords related to quaestornoun any of several public officials of ancient Rome (usually in charge of finance and administration)Related Words- finance
- functionary
- official
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