• Incumbent

    Origin

    From Middle English, from stem incumbent-, of Medieval Latin incumbēns ("holder of a church position"), from Latin present participle of incumbō ("I lie down upon").

    Full definition of incumbent

    Adjective

    incumbent

    1. Imposed on someone as an obligation, especially due to one's office.Proper behavior is incumbent on all holders of positions of trust.
      • SpratAll men, truly zealous, will perform those good works that are incumbent on all Christians.
    2. Lying; resting; reclining; recumbent.
      • Sir H. Wottontwo incumbent figures, gracefully leaning upon it
      • Addisonto move the incumbent load they try
    3. (botany, geology) Resting on something else; in botany, said of anthers when lying on the inner side of the filament, or of cotyledons when the radicle lies against the back of one of them.
    4. (zoology) Bent downwards so that the ends touch, or rest on, something else.the incumbent toe of a bird
    5. Being the current holder of an office or a title.If the incumbent senator dies, he is replaced by a person appointed by the governor.

    Noun

    incumbent

    (plural incumbents)
    1. The current holder of an office, such as ecclesiastical benefice or an elected office.
      • 2012, The Economist, 06 Oct 2012 issue, The first presidential debate: Back in the centre, back in the gameMr Obama’s problems were partly structural. An incumbent must defend the realities and compromises of government, while a challenger is freer to promise the earth, details to follow. Mr Obama’s odd solution was to play both incumbent and challenger, jumping from a defence of his record to indignation at such ills as over-crowded classrooms and tax breaks for big oil companies.
    2. (business) A holder of a position as supplier to a market or market segment that allows the holder to earn above-normal profits.
      • 2012, The Economist, Sep 29th 2012 issue, Schumpeter: Fixing the capitalist machineAmerican capitalism is becoming like its European cousin: established firms with the scale and scope to deal with a growing thicket of regulations are doing well, but new companies are withering on the vine or selling themselves to incumbents.
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