ecclesiastic in English

noun
1
a priest or clergyman.
Frequently visited by princes and high ecclesiastics , the monastery soon became famous.

Use "ecclesiastic" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "ecclesiastic" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "ecclesiastic", or refer to the context using the word "ecclesiastic" in the English Dictionary.

1. If a Commendatory abbot is an ecclesiastic, however, he …

2. FreeGeorge DourosAnalecta is an ecclesiastic scripts font, in Byzantine uncial

3. The ecclesiastic universities started to merge into the Chinese society and education system.

4. Possessing no ecclesiastic franchise, they expiate their grief by posting an InMemoriam notice.

5. Xiangya medical school, founded in 19 is studied as an ecclesiastic university in many recent works, but in fact, it is not an ecclesiastic university according to its growing process.

6. Synonyms for Curate include caretaker, assistant, clergyman, cleric, dominie, minister, pastor, priest, divine and ecclesiastic

7. Synonyms for Churchwoman include vicar, minister, priest, cleric, preacher, ecclesiastic, pastor, churchman, reverend and divine

8. Synonyms for Churchly include religious, ecclesiastical, holy, ecclesiastic, ecclesial, churchlike, churchy, spiritual, divine and church

9. The only witnesses had been Sarah's stepmother, and an ecclesiastic colleague who envied him his good fortune.

10. Stephen's Basilica is an ecclesiastic basilica located in Budapest and named in honor of Hungary's first Christian king.

11. The fourth chapter discussed medical education and agricultural education in the ecclesiastic universities and their social work.

12. It was the secularization of the ecclesial university publications that brought greater effects than other ecclesiastic publications.

13. Chaplain definition, an ecclesiastic attached to the chapel of a royal court, college, etc., or to a military unit

14. Benefice definition, a position or post granted to an ecclesiastic that guarantees a fixed amount of property or income

15. There are also several similar words to Churchly in our dictionary, which are Churchy, Ecclesiastic, Ecclesiastical, Holy, Religious and Churchlike

16. Approbation is an act by which a bishop or other legitimate superior grants to an ecclesiastic the actual exercise of his ministry

17. There are also several similar words to Churchwoman in our dictionary, which are Chaplain, Cleric, Clerical, Divine, Ecclesiastic, Minister, Parson, Reverend and Priest

18. Approbation is an act by which a bishop or other legitimate superior grants to an ecclesiastic the actual exercise of his ministry

19. Joined only by his ecclesiastic vassals and Herbert, he recruited troops in Burgundy, while Hugh the Great was convinced to join him.

20. Latin-ecclesiastic-accents / corpus / hymns / Nunc tempus Acceptabile.txt Go to file Go to file T; Go to line L; Copy path Copy permalink

21. Approbation is, in Catholic canon law, an act by which a bishop or other legitimate superior grants to an ecclesiastic the actual exercise of his ministry.

22. Archdeacon Meaning: "ecclesiastic who has charge of a part of a diocese," Old English arcediacon, from Church Latin… See definitions of Archdeacon.

23. Beethoven was extremely influential as among the first composers to work freelance rather than being employed full-time by a royal or ecclesiastic patron.

24. Alcuin of York (Latin: Alcuinus) or Ealhwine, nicknamed Albinus or Flaccus (730s or 740s – May 19, 804) was a scholar, ecclesiastic, poet and teacher from York, Northumb.

25. Approbation, in Catholic canon law, is an act by which a bishop or other legitimate superior grants to an ecclesiastic the actual exercise of his ministry

26. There is, however, one side of life to which he is entirely blind, as was perhaps natural in an ecclesiastic writing before the Age of Salons.

27. Analecta is an ecclesiastic scripts font, in Byzantine uncial style, covering Basic Latin, Greek and Coptic, some Punctuation and other Symbols, Coptic, typographica varia, Specials, Gothic and Deseret.

28. The sounds of the church singing ceased and the voice of the chief ecclesiastic was heard,(Sentencedict) respectfully congratulating the sick man on his reception of the mystery.

29. Approbation is, in Catholic canon law, an act by which a bishop or other legitimate superior grants to an ecclesiastic the actual exercise of his ministry.

30. A member of the French secular clergy; a title of respect for any ecclesiastic Not to be confused with: Abbey – a monastery under the supervision of an

31. Where the abbot and the convent have each a separate income, the Commendatory abbot, who must then be an ecclesiastic, has jurisdiction in foro externo over the members of the community and

32. Where the abbot and the convent have each a separate income, the Commendatory abbot, who must then be an ecclesiastic, has jurisdiction in foro externo over the members of the community and

33. Where the abbot and the convent have each a separate income, the Commendatory abbot, who must then be an ecclesiastic, has jurisdiction in foro externo over the members of the community and

34. A Commendatory abbot (Latin: abbas commendatarius) is an ecclesiastic, or sometimes a layman, who holds an abbey in commendam, drawing its revenues but not exercising any authority over its inner monastic discipline

35. Brawling (probably connected with German language brüllen, to roar, shout), in law, was the offence of quarrelling, or creating a disturbance in a church or churchyard. Brawling was covered in ecclesiastic courts until 1860

36. His friend and instructor, Bernard of Clairvaux, the most influential ecclesiastic of the time, remonstrated against his election on account of his innocence and simplicity, but Bernard soon Acquiesced and continued to be the mainstay of the papacy throughout Eugenius's pontificate.

37. Curate (n.) late 14c., "spiritual guide, ecclesiastic responsible for the spiritual welfare of those in his charge; parish priest," from Medieval Latin curatus "one responsible for the care (of souls)," from Latin curatus, past participle of curare "to take care of" (see cure (v.))

38. Judaism, the oldest of the three Abrahamic religions, did not generate any official monastic institutions, and its normative form, Rabbinic Judaism, is the least sympathetic of the Abrahamic religions to monasticism.The Essenes of the Qumrān community, the sole monastic group in the history of Judaism, were, in their own vision, inimical to the ecclesiastic

39. The Prince-Archbishopric of York, commonly known to its inhabitants simply as the Archbishopric, is a neo-feudal ecclesiastic state located in northern England, occupying most of the historic English counties of Yorkshire, Northumberland, Cumbria, Westmorland and County Durham.It is one of a number of small autonomous states founded in the former United Kingdom following the Cataclysm in 2082