English to Gujarati Dictionary prerogative

prerogative

વિશેષાધિકાર
definition
noun
owning an automobile was still the prerogative of the rich
a right or privilege exclusive to a particular individual or class.
adjective
the monarch retained the formal prerogative power to appoint the Prime Minister
arising from the prerogative of the Crown (usually delegated to the government or the judiciary) and based in common law rather than statutory law.
translation of 'prerogative'
અધિકારવિશેષ,
પરમાધિકાર
example
Leisure, they insisted, should remain the 'prerogative' of the rich.
It is the Government's 'prerogative' to make that decision.
But this is, after all, an executive 'prerogative' .
The 'prerogative' to nominate federal judges, including justices to the U.S. Supreme Court, is an important presidential power.
Power can be responsible, strong government can be democratic, and presidential 'prerogative' can be constitutional.
The common law and the 'prerogative' law does not tend to like absolutes.
First, liberty is the 'prerogative' of citizens, and a large majority of the population will not possess citizenship.
Previously, of course, literacy had been the exclusive 'prerogative' of the clergy.
His theory of democracy in which an assembly of citizens would exercise sovereign 'prerogative' was clearly inadequate.
The birthright is the 'prerogative' of the eldest son.
With the usual 'prerogative' of the wealthy classes, he tended to choose doctors with a reputation for having studied some topics in greater detail than usual.
That is entirely within Dr Smith's 'prerogative' , and no one else's.
As Mill put it, it is the right and 'prerogative' of each person, once they have reached the maturity of their years, to interpret for themselves the meaning and value of their experiences.
But beyond the assertion of sovereign 'prerogative' , there was also a thinly veiled message of contempt.
‘Foreign policy is the 'prerogative' of the federal government,’ says the German constitution, and such has been the standard practice up to now.
While admiration of the moon is a distinctive women's activity in a garden setting, this was not purely a female 'prerogative' .
Collecting, however, is not the 'prerogative' of the rich.
In India, the study of Sanskrit was denied to many segments of the Hindu population, as it was deemed to be a 'prerogative' of only the privileged caste.
No longer the 'prerogative' of middle class matrons or ladies who lunch, a fabulous range of facilities is right here in Glasgow.
Was this a 'prerogative' act, such as only the Crown and its military servants could order and perform?
Furthermore, constitutions often specify that the conduct of foreign policy is the government's 'prerogative' .
The taxation of transport and of sales of merchandise, for example, was the exclusive 'prerogative' of the king and his agents until the middle of the ninth century.
But I don't question the authority and 'prerogative' of the president.
In the months leading up to the deadline, questions were revived about the power and 'prerogative' of Congress to wage war.
Query whether it is under the 'prerogative' powers of the Crown.
It is not the Chair's 'prerogative' to determine the declaration of a vote.
That would be the Government's prerogative, and the Government's 'prerogative' only.
In contrast, the elegantly cultivated beard was long the 'prerogative' of royalty and the privileged classes.
The honey seems extraordinarily expensive, but then sweetness was a 'prerogative' of the rich until the eighteenth century.
In answering such a question, the executive enjoys no constitutional 'prerogative' .
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