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conservatorship
[kuhn-sur-vuh-ter-ship]
noun
the position of being a conservator, especially a person who repairs, restores, or maintains the condition of objects in a museum, library, etc..
The program will give participants an opportunity to get a feel for the level of precision and care necessary for a career in museum conservatorship.
Law.an agreement or order under which one person or entity controls the personal and financial affairs of another, such as a minor or someone who is considered legally incapable of managing their own affairs.
She's under a court-approved conservatorship that oversees every significant purchase and every key decision that she wants to make.
Law.an agreement whereby a business or financial entity is placed under the control of another entity, usually temporarily and often as a result of prior or impending failure.
This week, a bipartisan coalition in the legislature is demanding that the agency’s leaders be replaced and the agency be put under an independent conservatorship.
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of conservatorship1
Example Sentences
Cher’s request for a conservatorship over her son’s finances was denied.
A cause of death was not revealed, but Wilson was diagnosed with dementia and placed under a conservatorship in May 2024.
Wilson died more than a year after it was revealed he was diagnosed with dementia and placed under a conservatorship in May 2024.
Soon after, the musician was placed under a conservatorship, with his family saying he was "unable to properly provide for his own personal needs for physical health, food, clothing, or shelter".
In 2022, she successfully removed herself from that conservatorship, which had control of her estate and her person — i.e. her money and her body — for almost nine years.
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