adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a presidential campaign
▪ Obama's presidential campaign
a presidential candidate
▪ What is the system for selecting presidential candidates?
a presidential commission
▪ the Presidentail Commission on Health Care
a presidential contest
▪ the 1987 U.S presidential contest
a presidential coup (=in which power is taken from a president)
▪ The new leader returned the country to democratic rule following his presidential coup.
a presidential election (=to elect a new president)
▪ He is the Democrat Party’s candidate for the next presidential election.
a presidential rival
▪ His presidential rivals have vigorously attacked him.
a presidential/Senate/mayoral race
▪ He put $12 million of his own money into a Senate race.
political/presidential ambitions
▪ His political ambitions were put on hold while he waited for a suitable opportunity.
presidential authority
▪ A number of constitutional amendments have increased presidential authority.
presidential/royal/ministerial etc duties (=duties that go with being a president, member of a royal family, a minister etc)
▪ The prince is now old enough to carry out royal duties.
the presidential oath (=sworn by a new president)
▪ the oldest person ever to take the presidential oath for the first time
the presidential/Senate etc nomination (=a nomination for a particular job or position)
▪ He was unsuccessful in his campaign for the presidential nomination in 2008.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
address
▪ Perhaps this was best articulated in the course of the presidential address to the Association by Sidney Lee in 1918.
▪ His presidential address in New York dwelt on the importance of communication between science and industry.
bid
▪ Forbes, 48, a multimillionaire funding his presidential bid with his own money, has never held elective office.
▪ He contends that an independent presidential bid by the Rev.
▪ Phil Gramm ended his presidential bid Wednesday in much the same way he campaigned: short on emotion and long on economics.
▪ Dole, who needs conservative activists' support for his presidential bid.
▪ Mr Lieberman was the first senator to endorse Mr Clinton's presidential bid in 1992.
campaign
▪ How the next U.S. president would seize that opportunity should be a defining issue of the presidential campaign.
▪ So much money had been put into circulation because of the presidential campaign that inflation was rampant.
▪ Their face-off here was widely seen as a possible prelude to the presidential campaign in the year 2000.
▪ Barry Goldwater touted it in his 1964 presidential campaign.
▪ But their antipathy goes much deeper than one presidential campaign.
▪ And when Dole wanted defense policy advice for his presidential campaign, he turned not to Thurmond but to Sen.
candidate
▪ Forbes is an unlikely vice presidential candidate himself, partly because of his intense attacks on Dole in the early primary states.
▪ Alan Keyes, the only other Republican presidential candidate to participate in Louisiana, won no delegates.
▪ He strongly implied that part of the plan involved funneling campaign contributions to members of Congress, state officials and presidential candidates.
▪ Voters report that they learn more about presidential candidates from the nationally-televised debates than from any other campaign event.
▪ Richard Starke believes Republican presidential candidate Steve Forbes' flat-tax proposal is a fine idea.
▪ Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole appears to have two minds when it comes to taxes.
▪ Crucial tests of leadership confront the two presidential candidates.
▪ But this year, presidential candidate Pat Buchanan added two other issues: trade and economic insecurity.
contender
▪ The tone then was set by conservative commentator and unsuccessful presidential contender Pat Buchanan, who forecast a cultural and religious war.
▪ Edward M.. Kennedy and an adviser to presidential contender Jesse Jackson.
▪ Commentator and presidential contender Pat Buchanan also supports a single income-tax rate.
▪ Of the three leading presidential contenders in 1987, he was the closest to a normal politician.
▪ The other unsuccessful presidential contenders, including Sen.
▪ When the two presidential contenders finally left San Diego after their second 90-minute debate last Wednesday night, very little had changed.
▪ The Arizona primary has made one thing clear: At least one presidential contender must drop out.
contest
▪ Last week Iowa delivered the first results of the presidential contest of 2000.
▪ The number of illiterate adults exceeds by 16 million the entire vote cast for the winner in the 1980 presidential contest.
▪ It's a familiar routine, as Bush continues to work the centre ground in his presidential contest with Al Gore.
▪ Both the Clinton and Dole campaigns had assumed the presidential contest in Ohio would go down the wire.
▪ Dole is considered to be the man to beat in the Republican presidential contest.
▪ Kerrey is considered a potential rival of Gore in the next presidential contest.
▪ Politics was discussed at the dinner table every night, and in 1960, the Kennedy-Nixon presidential contest divided his parents.
▪ But on Tuesday, Louisiana is set to hold the first caucuses of the 1996 presidential contest.
debate
▪ And didn't it, in many ways, shape the whole presidential debate, raising causes that others feared to touch?
▪ That gradual shift in attitudes was first seen in the 1992 presidential debates between Bill Clinton and George Bush.
▪ Some soccer moms waited in their minivans and station wagons, but none had their radios tuned to the presidential debate.
▪ Last week in Boston Bush and Gore met for the first of the three presidential debates.
▪ Kantor said the Clinton campaign proposed an initial presidential debate on Oct. 6&038;.
▪ In a vice presidential debate with then-Sen.
decree
▪ The Assembly was dissolved by presidential decree on Oct. 12.
▪ Under a presidential decree of Aug. 6, oil and gas export prices were deregulated soas to bring them into line with world prices.
▪ Additionally, two presidential decrees on March 23 had been designed to cushion the blow of the price rises.
▪ Sobchak said the presidium's decision was illegal since his instruction had been made in accordance with the presidential decree of January 1991.
▪ The presidential decrees were, however, suspended after telephone negotiations on April 9.
▪ Because of the paralysis of Weimar Reich stags, presidential decrees were rarely in danger of repeal.
▪ Five million roubles had already been allocated to aid resettlement, and a presidential decree had created the legal prerequisites.
election
▪ The abstention rate among the 3,200,000 registered voters in the presidential elections was put as high as 43.7 percent.
▪ And that is one reason why this presidential election is beginning to look so transparent and trivial.
▪ The United States presidential election has been a calamity without precedent.
▪ The impact of television in a presidential election can not be underestimated.
▪ He explained his resignation on the grounds that he wanted to spend more time preparing his candidacy for forthcoming presidential elections.
▪ My party had no chance to win the presidential election.
▪ Mr Chirac seems to want to wait for the presidential election in 1995.
hopeful
▪ Republican presidential hopefuls have all claimed that they would take a firmer stance towards Moscow.
▪ The party has broken ranks, with five of its nine presidential hopefuls calling for a review of the revisions.
▪ Every four years, presidential hopefuls have learned, the New Hampshire mouse roars like lion.
▪ The Arizona primary was supposed to winnow the field of Republican presidential hopefuls.
▪ On Saturday night, the 476 convention delegates will question Republican presidential hopefuls.
nomination
▪ He is a heavy backer and advisor to Governor Bill Clinton, front-runner for the Democrats' presidential nomination.
▪ Developments in presidential election campaign December saw several key developments within the presidential nomination campaigns of both the Democratic and Republican parties.
▪ Bob Dole may have the Republican presidential nomination all but wrapped up.
nominee
▪ George W.. Bush, the putative Republican presidential nominee, but also by Rep.
▪ In their day, presidential nominees were chosen by members of Congress meeting in caucus.
▪ Run-off elections to decide finally on the presidential nominees, originally planned for Oct. 3, were rescheduled to Oct. 10.
▪ Meeting in Chicago, delegates named Abraham Lincoln as their presidential nominee.
▪ Any senator can hold up a vote on a presidential nominee without explaining why or even divulging the hold publicly.
▪ The Republican presidential nominee exuded confidence and looked relaxed.
palace
▪ He set out for the presidential palace about 6 a.m. but heard the place was surrounded.
▪ She would even bring street urchins into the presidential palace to bathe them and treat their scabies and give them a meal.
▪ Although she grew up in the country's presidential palaces, Megawati displayed no interest in politics until she was 40.
▪ They left telephone lines at the presidential palace intact, allowing Diem to appeal to loyal units to rescue him.
▪ At one point Dostam used fighter bombers to attack the presidential palace and defence ministry.
▪ It was university women like these who surged into the streets in front of the presidential palace in Algiers to demand democracy.
▪ It had also claimed responsibility for blasts near the presidential palace and government buildings last month.
▪ He was welcomed in boardrooms and presidential palaces everywhere as the spokesman of worldwide Diaspora Jewry.
politics
▪ So far, the absolutist position has dominated Republican presidential politics.
▪ New Hampshire, with a population of only 1. 1 million, has long had a disproportionate influence on presidential politics.
▪ Frenzied fund-raising and free-wheeling spending transformed not only presidential politics but also House and Senate contests.
▪ A day away from presidential politics for a junkie is guaranteed to shift perspective and challenge perception.
▪ The Republicans had dominated presidential politics for almost twenty-five years when Clinton began his bid for the White House.
▪ This represents a dramatic turn of events in presidential politics.
▪ In presidential politics, winning is neither the only thing or everything.
▪ In presidential politics, numbers like these are extremely tempting, particularly in a close election.
power
▪ Presidential decrees enacting reform Gorbachev used his emergency presidential powers to issue during October four decrees marking critical steps towards market reform.
▪ He had a rare gift for casting presidential power in heroic terms.
▪ He asked for approval of a constitution with sweeping new presidential powers in the failed referendum last week.
▪ Because the president remained conscious during the operation, there was no need for a temporary transfer of presidential powers.
▪ The talks focused on presidential powers and the distribution of seats in a new transitional Cabinet.
▪ His interpretation of presidential power in such cases was evidently shared by some members of Congress.
▪ What are the secrets of presidential power?
▪ The contention is that presidential power should be implied from the aggregate of his powers under the Constitution.
primary
▪ Rosen has worked politically for Kennedy since his 1980 presidential primary run and developed a close friendship with the senator.
▪ Every New Hampshire presidential primary is one for the history books.
▪ And this presidential primary will be anything but standard.
▪ By contrast, 11, 000 voters cast early ballots in the recent Super Tuesday presidential primaries.
▪ The prospect of relative regularity at the beginning of the presidential primaries should not suggest it will be an unexciting campaign year.
▪ The man making the humble request was Paul Tsongas, who just hours before had won the New Hampshire presidential primary.
race
▪ Then billionaire Ross Perot hinted he may rejoin the presidential race as an independent.
▪ In the presidential race, the outcome was not unexpected.
▪ The only serious contender left in the presidential race is Guei himself.
▪ Phil Gramm of Texas, DiVall polled for Dole in his 1988 presidential race.
▪ Lamar Alexander, who dropped out of the presidential race Wednesday, to endorse him in Nashville on Friday.
▪ And even if the agency avoids further scathing, it is likely to become a hot target in the presidential race.
▪ With Ross Perot off the track for now, Forbes is the only true outsider in the presidential race.
▪ The presidential race is setting records.
system
▪ Thus in its latter years the Soviet Union was constitutionally a mainstream presidential system.
▪ The presidential system offers checks and balances but does not ensure consistency between legislation and execution.
▪ First, they examine the extent to which different presidential systems are likely to experience democratic breakdown.
▪ Also, a presidential system can so balance power between legislature and executive that there are damaging stalemates and confusion of accountability.
▪ Second, they demonstrate how different presidential systems produce a trade-off between the principles of democratic efficiency and democratic representation.
▪ Even in presidential systems, the legislature has the power to overturn the executive by means of the extraordinary process of impeachment.
▪ Britain, according to Jessop etal., is moving towards a presidential system of government.
▪ Impeachment is quite rare in presidential systems.
term
▪ Menem did not have time to push through his plan before the end of his presidential term.
▪ The frigid opening of every congressional and presidential term inspires a bounty of new proposals.
▪ That has created a precedent which, it is argued, could also apply to the presidential term.
▪ And a national debt that took 200 years to reach a trillion bucks, tripled in two presidential terms.
▪ There was speculation during the campaign that 75-year-old Mitterrand might resign before the end of his presidential term.
▪ A gaggle of Republicans dreams of winning one presidential term.
▪ The Khatami camp never doubted that their man would win a second presidential term.
veto
▪ With those southerners on board, Mr Edwards believes Congress may have a chance of overriding another presidential veto.
▪ The final vote was 57-41, well short of the 65 needed to override a presidential veto.
▪ He said that if necessary he would use his presidential veto.
▪ J.. Even if passed by the Senate, it faces a near-certain presidential veto.
▪ A subsequent vote in the Senate failed to achieve the two-thirds majority necessary to overturn a presidential veto.
▪ However, the measure faces a certain presidential veto if it clears the Senate.
▪ If Congress and the administration are to avoid a head-on clash, and a presidential veto, a compromise must be struck.
▪ It is not smart politics to sit back and wait for presidential vetoes and proclamations to bail us out of every jam.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ presidential candidates
▪ a presidential proclamation
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Aides to Republican Bob Dole had no immediate comment on whether the cash-strapped presidential candidate would campaign by bus.
▪ And his political resurrection offers campaign salvation to Bob Dole, whose presidential candidacy Atwater helped to destroy in 1988.
▪ In the end, the wisdom of prolonging the presidential mandate will be judged by what Hariri delivers.
▪ It has become a cliche to say that presidential candidates are being marketed like bars of soap and boxes of cereal.
▪ Sobchak said the presidium's decision was illegal since his instruction had been made in accordance with the presidential decree of January 1991.
▪ The cult of precision reaches its apotheosis in the presidential code name: Zero One.
▪ The vice presidential debate is scheduled Oct. 2 in Hartford, Conn.