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See also: semistate

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From semi- +‎ state.

Adjective

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semi-state (not comparable)

  1. (Ireland) state-owned but managed independently along commercial lines
    • 1950 March 2, Edward Richards-Orpen, State and Semi-State Companies—Motion. Seanad Éireann debates Vol.37 No.9 p.5 c.692:
      I think it would be agreed by all that in the last ten or 15 years we have seen a remarkable growth of these State and semi-State companies, by which I mean companies in which our Minister for Finance holds shares and very often holds the dominating number of shares.
    • 2007 October 29, Patricia McDonagh, “Top 10 bosses in semi-state firms cost total of €2m a year”, in Irish Independent:
      TAXPAYERS are shelling out more than €2m annually to pay for the salaries of 10 high-profile CEOs employed in commercial semi-state bodies.
  2. ceremonial, but somewhat less ornate, formal, or prestigious than would be classed as "state"
    • 1896, Cassell's Family Magazine, page 700:
      There now remains the fourth side of the square, which is devoted to the state and semi-state carriages. The semi-state carriages, eleven in number, are chiefly of modern make.
    • 1940, Larz Anderson, “An Embassy to Japan”, in Letters and Journals of a Diplomat, Fleming H. Revell, page 380:
      Soon a full-state carriage arrived, followed by two semi-state carriages, [...]
    • 2010 November 24, Stephen Bates, “Royal wedding set to be a 'semi-state occasion' at Westminster Abbey”, in The Guardian:
      The wedding will be what was termed a "semi-state" occasion.
    • a. 2017, Royal Collection Trust, "Windsor Castle > The Semi-State Rooms" (website accessed 19 Oct 2017)
      These Semi-State Rooms are among the most richly decorated interiors in the Castle and are used by The Queen for official entertaining.

Anagrams

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