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to steward
noun
A person who manages the property or affairs for another entity, particularly the chief administrator of a medieval manor.
Exact(57)
Or do whatever little is required to steward the status quo.
Here is where our leaders come in, those we put in power to steward us.
There were hundreds more seats to be named, 15 galas to plan, and thousands of members to steward.
A fixer not a visionary, Mr Mukherjee was not the obvious choice to steward today's more open and vibrant economy.
This has enabled the council to steward HE policy with the consent of universities, building consensus most of the time.
By using social media to steward your donors and advocates, you can cultivate relationships far beyond the initial thank you.
On demobilisation he embarked upon a yawning range of jobs, from street photographer to steward on a Cunard cruise ship.
The chance to steward a younger couple (and leach off their vitality) seems too good to miss.
Applications to steward open in spring but you should register your interest now in order to get a reminder.
And asking a Welsh-born theologian to steward a Communion that probably holds more churchgoers in Lagos than Liverpool is a recipe for constant agony.
"I was hired to steward an old and valuable institution," said Mr. Genoways, his hands folded in his lap during an interview last week.
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