Incumbent
Origin
From Middle English, from stem incumbent-, of Medieval Latin incumbēns ("holder of a church position"), from Latin present participle of incumbŠ("I lie down upon").
Full definition of incumbent
Adjective
incumbent
- 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.
- Lying; resting; reclining; recumbent.
- Sir H. Wottontwo incumbent figures, gracefully leaning upon it
- Addisonto move the incumbent load they try
- (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.
- (zoology) Bent downwards so that the ends touch, or rest on, something else.the incumbent toe of a bird
- 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)- 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.
- (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.