Definition of president-elect in English:
 president-elect
nounPlural presidents-electˌprɛzəd(ə)ntɪˈlɛktˈˌprɛz(ə)dənt əˈlɛkt
A person who has been elected president but has not yet taken up office.
as title President-elect Pearman
 Example sentencesExamples
-  The president-elect was alluding to the biggest concern of Peru's ruling elite regarding the case.
 -  The president-elect needs to be bold in recruiting his ministers.
 -  The president-elect is likely to bring new leaders into office and this could set into motion processes that bring changes in policy.
 -  The president-elect will certainly have his hands full.
 -  Logically a president in power for 4 years is more likely to have a more structured understanding of complex problems than a president-elect.
 -  The U.S. president-elect will have to pay attention.
 -  He is the president-elect of the New York State Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
 -  Temple officials beat drums and rang bells to welcome the president-elect, while neighborhood residents set off firecrackers.
 -  ‘This form of communication could become a tradition,’ the president-elect said.
 -  As I write this, no one knows who will be the president-elect of the United States.
 -  The incident emphasises the gulf between the president-elect and his own supporters.
 -  Under normal circumstances, a president-elect would have more than two months after the election to prepare his move into the White House.
 -  Ministerial appointments in Indonesia, as elsewhere, are the exclusive privilege of the president-elect.
 -  He said that the new director of the service should be elected after consultations between the government and the president-elect.
 -  State presidents and presidents-elect brought encouraging reports.
 -  A more serious analysis of the issues was also to be expected because Eisenhower, like all presidents-elect, realized he would have to grapple with the world's problems within a matter of weeks.
 -  Before a president-elect has time to prove himself in office, he gets tested in transition.
 -  I don't understand why your president-elect should have any problem saying that he is ‘Chinese.’
 -  This pattern has solidified the president-elect's victory and bestowed a constitutionally mandated authority upon him.
 -  Obviously, however, a president-elect was in no position to assure the American people that there were no troops in Cambodia.