Supernumerary

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

Supernumerary is an additional member of an organization. A supernumerary is also non-regular member of a staff, a member of the staff or an employee who works in a public office who is not part of the manpower complement. Thus, a supernumerary could be an extra member or a temporary employee in addition to the permanent staff, or permanent members of a society.[1][2]

There are supernumerary actors, knights, ladies, professors, police, ministers, judges, military personnel, and writers.

This use of the terms supernumerary and its counterpart, numerary, is in common use in Spanish and Latin American academy and government, and it is now also used in countries all over the world, like France, the US, England, Italy, etc.

In the Roman army, supernumerarii were either public officers who attended on several of the Roman magistrates or a kind of soldier who served to fill the places of those who were killed or disabled by their wounds, or otherwise bring up the ranks to strength.

Supernumerary is distinguished from numerary which is a civil designation for persons who are incorporated in a fixed or permanent way to a society or group, meaning a regular member of the working staff; permanent staff or member.

The term usually refers then to a type of employment which has a temporary contract.[3]

Types of supernumeraries

There are many types of supernumeraries, depending on the society where they belong:

Example of supernumeraries

Thomas Paine whose writings led to the Declaration of Independence was a supernumerary officer of the army.

Notes

  1. ^ Short lexicon of employee relations
  2. ^ Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary
  3. ^ Ability Plus - Training Scheme for People with Disabilities
  4. ^ Museo Lázaro Galdiano - Ficha de Inventario - Un contador supernumerario del Ministerio de Marina
  5. ^ Excmo. Sr. D. Eugenio Andrés Puente, Curriculum Vitae
  6. ^ Channel Asia News