0 present participle of nominate
1 to officially suggest someone for an election, job, position, or honour:
2 to officially choose someone for a job or to do something:
She was nominated as the delegation's official interpreter.
[ + to infinitive ] President Yeltsin nominated acting prime minister Sergei Kiriyenko to head the government.
Errors of overnomination can occur only when a party's nominating strategy results in one or more losing candidacies.
They attribute this result to certain reforms of the party's nominating process.
We establish, for all possible nominating strategies, the conditions on voting outcomes required for actors to maximize benefits in the context.
First, if greed for office motivated the choice of a nominating strategy, then overnomination should have been general among the parties.
Since the fraternity apparently did not flourish, however, we may never find out if the new mechanism for nominating royal minstrels was ever used.
Furthermore, the party branch can specifically direct or manipulate elections through the process of nominating candidates and checking their credentials and qualifications.
If more seats can be won by nominating more candidates, then the original strategy is an undernomination.
This did not emerge, with only 13% of the current vasectomy men nominating this.