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WordNet
executive secretary

n. a secretary having administrative duties and responsibilities

Wikipedia
Executive Secretary (Philippines)

The Executive Secretary of the Philippines (formerly known as the Secretary to the President or Chief of the Executive Office) is the head and highest-ranking official of the Office of the President of the Philippines and a member of the Cabinet of the Philippines. The office-holder has been nicknamed as the "Little President" due to the nature of the position. It was given the mandate "to directly assist the President in the management of affairs of the government as well as to direct the operations of the Executive Office."

The office was established on October 12, 1936, with Jorge B. Vargas as the inaugural holder.

The current Executive Secretary is Salvador Medialdea, serving in this position since June 30, 2016, when President Rodrigo R. Duterte was inaugurated.

Usage examples of "executive secretary".

Worst of all, he even lacked the courtesy to have his executive secretary deflect appointment requests.

She had invisible antennae that resonated to human distress, and she knew me as well as an executive secretary of fifteen years could.

A new doorway had been cut in the wall so that he could stroll in without passing the executive secretary in the anteroom, and together they managed CIA's diminished collection of case officers.

An hour after that, Moira Wolfe came to his door minutes ahead of the time his own executive secretary showed up.

The next step, so the story went, was a computer into which you'd just speak, making the characters appear by voice command, sure to become the curse of every executive secretary in the world, because it would largely make them obsolete.

She was executive secretary to the taipan, a distant cousin to Phillip Chen.

She was executive secretary to the tai-pan, a distant cousin to Phillip Chen.

For five years she had worked as a confidential executive secretary for a Soviet Russian spy, who had since fled the country, and she had accepted a high salary, Judas money, from him and from his Vaduz Exporters, a secret Communist Front organization.

For the last two years she had held a well-paid position as executive secretary to the director of Vaduz Exporters, in nearby Bethesda, Maryland.

He was not proud to be talking like this to an attractive young woman who was the executive secretary of his committee, and he knew the poor impression he must be making, but in recent weeks he had grown quite desperate-he overworking in Washington, his wife frittering away her life back home-and he needed help.