"FRANK" - The Most Selfish WARD | ...Ask what YOU can do for Bacon! - Expectations of The Ambassadors-at-Large

He is sincere..and his eye shows no fake..that was the way he expressed his thought..but his thought is so predictable and It is something that we are already aware in our life.
sansan Maurer - 7 months ago

You can see fakeness in his eyes
Wajid Riaz - 7 months ago

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Ambassador

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The term is derived from Middle English ambassadour, Anglo-French ambassateur, ultimately of Latin origin from the word Ambaxus-Ambactus, meaning servant or minister; akin to Old High German ambaht, "service". The first known usage of the term is in the Bible.

An ambassador is an official envoy,

especially a high-ranking diplomat who represents a state and is usually accredited to another sovereign state or to an international organization as the resident representative of their own government or sovereign or appointed for a special and often temporary diplomatic assignment. The word is also often used more liberally for persons who are known, without national appointment, to represent certain professions, activities and fields of endeavor such as sales.

Ambassador-at-Large[edit]

An ambassador-at-large is a diplomat of the highest rank or a minister who is accredited to represent their country. But unlike the ambassador-in-residence, who is usually limited to a country or embassy, the ambassador-at-large can be appointed to operate in several usually neighbouring countries, a region or sometimes a seat of international organizations such as the United Nations or European Union. In some cases, an ambassador-at-large may even be specifically assigned a role to advise and assist the state or Government in particular issues.

Historically, presidents or prime ministers have commissioned special diplomatic envoys for specific assignments, primarily overseas but sometimes also within the country as ambassadors-at-large.

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ward

wôrd/Submit

noun

  1. a separate room in a hospital, typically one allocated to a particular type of patient.
    "a children's ward"
    synonyms: room, department, unit, area, wing
    "the surgical ward"

  2. an administrative division of a city or borough that typically elects and is represented by a councilor or councilors.
    synonyms: district, constituency, division, quarter, zone, parish
    "the majority of voters in our ward are Democrats"

  3. a person, usually a minor, under the care and control of a guardian appointed by their parents or a court.
    synonyms: dependent, charge, protégé
    "the boy is my ward"

  4. any of the internal ridges or bars in a lock that prevent the turning of any key that does not have grooves of corresponding form or size.

  5. archaic
    the action of keeping a lookout for danger.
    "I saw them keeping ward at one of those huge gates"

  6. historical
    an area of ground enclosed by the encircling walls of a fortress or castle.

  7. FENCING
    a defensive position or motion.

verb: ward; 3rd person present: wards; past tense: warded; past participle: warded; gerund or present participle: warding

  1. archaic
    guard; protect.
    "it was his duty to ward the king"

  2. admit (a patient) to a hospital ward.

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