Word
Of
The
Day
delegate
delegate \DEL-uh-gayt\
verb
To delegate something (such as control, responsibility, authority, or a job or duty) is to trust someone else with it.
// Those tasks can be
delegated to someone else.
See the entry >
Examples:
“In practice, principals shuttle back and forth, sometimes multiple times a day, or divide their schedule between mornings and afternoons, or alternate full days at each school. When they’re off-site, they must formally
delegate authority, but parents and teachers say it’s not always clear who holds decision-making power.” — Isabel Teotonio,
The Toronto Star, 1 Dec. 2025
Did you know?
To delegate is to literally or figuratively send someone else in your place, an idea that is reflected in the word’s origin: it is a descendant of the Latin word
lēgāre, meaning “to send as an
envoy” (a messenger or representative). The noun
delegate, which refers to a person who is chosen or elected to vote or act for others, arrived in English in the 14th century, while the verb didn’t make its entrée till the early 16th century. (Note that the verb rhymes with
relegate while the noun rhymes with
delicate.) Some distant cousins of the word
delegate that also trace back to
lēgāre include
legacy,
colleague,
relegate, and
legate, “an official representative sent to a foreign country.”