Judicial
Legislative
The power that is vested in the President and the Vice President is called executive power. This power is expected to be exercised according to the constitution.
When all the power is vested in the centrel government
The President is the chief executive officer.
Vested is defined as acquired by law or contract. Vested is having possession of a person. Vested can also mean entitled or earned. For a retirement program, vested means the amount of time and work required for the employee to complete before they are entitled to their retirement funds.
Balance in your investment account before tax
It should be "property vested in," as "vested in" indicates ownership or control being placed in something or someone, while "vested to" is not grammatically correct.
Vested interest seems to be a legal term. It means that someone has the right to obtain access to various types of property. It also means a special interest in pushing things that carry personal advantage.
Deferred VestingA pension plan participant's right to receive benefits from a plan that requires a minimum age and a minimum number of service years before the participant is vested in the benefits.
The power vested in Harry in the movie Harry Potter. This is an example of vested in a sentence.
No; people with a vested interest in the status quo are not interested in change. However, it's important to remember that change is not synonymous with progress.
Your life insurance policy would pay out immediately after ratifying the contract
Vested means "held" and unvested means the opposite. ex: Here are the powers vested in congress;....
It means that what assets are in your pension account, they belong to you. All belong to you if you are 100% vested. Only half, if 50% vested.
The meaning of "vested" in Tagalog is "imal na tinatatag."
by the powers VESTED in me is correct.