英:['sʌb'eɪdʒənsɪ]
美:['sʌb'eɪdʒənsɪ]
英:['sʌb'eɪdʒənsɪ]
美:['sʌb'eɪdʒənsɪ]
noun
a subordinate agency
regional subagencies of the U.S. Department of Transportation
the office or function of a subagent (as in real estate)
A subagency is created when one broker appoints other brokers, as subagents, to help perform client-based functions on the principal's behalf.—Thomas J. Bellairs et al.
分代理处
次代理人
The first known use of subagency was in 1742
1 The Executive Office for Immigration Review, the U.S. Department of Justice subagency that oversees immigration courts and established the dedicated docket, did not respond to a request for comment.
2 Employers would likely have to present their plans to OSHA, a subagency of the Labor Department, during a workplace inspection and could be fined for violations.
3 House Appropriations Committee Chair Rosa DeLauro, D.-Conn., asked the Office of the Inspector General for the Department of Health and Human Services to investigate whether or not the FDA, a subagency of HHS, took appropriate and effective action.
4 ASHINGTON — Health secretary Alex Azar suddenly appointed a new top lawyer at the Food and Drug Administration just hours after the subagency had announced its own pick for the post.
5 Some progressive groups are also homing in on the top role at an obscure but key subagency: the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), which reviews proposed regulations by executive agencies.
6 The subcommittee took particular aim at the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, a subagency within the Executive Office of the President.