Ecclesiast

Word ECCLESIAST
Character 10
Hyphenation ec cle si ast
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Ecclesiast"

What do we mean by ecclesiast?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word ecclesiast. Define ecclesiast, ecclesiast synonyms, ecclesiast pronunciation, ecclesiast translation, English dictionary definition of ecclesiast.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Ecclesiast

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The word "ecclesiast" in example sentences

Only those have right to the name "ecclesiast" who have been redeemed from their sins through Christ's wounds, and who live holy lives. ❋ Martin Luther (1514)

But as Christianity began to spread throughout Anatolia, a Christian ecclesiast outlawed the cult of Artemis in the fifth century. ❋ Jan (2008)

Now of offices some are discontinuous, and the same persons are not allowed to hold them twice, or can only hold them after a fixed interval; others have no limit of time — for example, the office of a dicast or ecclesiast. ❋ Aristotle (2002)

For the power does not reside in the dicast, or senator, or ecclesiast, but in the court, and the senate, and the assembly, of which individual senators, or ecclesiasts, or dicasts, are only parts or members. ❋ Aristotle (2002)

Let us not dwell further upon this, which is a purely verbal question; what we want is a common term including both dicast and ecclesiast. ❋ Aristotle (2002)

Every worshiper was a zealot; every ecclesiast an inquisitor. ❋ Elizabeth Miller (N/A)

Not even the highest ecclesiast can be at his devotions always. ❋ Christopher Morley (1923)

A famous ecclesiast, when on his way to the coast, was forced to spend the night in the King's Lynn Inn, owing to a violent snowstorm. ❋ Elliott O'Donnell (1918)

I have it on the authority of a Mormon ecclesiast, who was in the political confidence of the ❋ Frank Jenne Cannon (1902)

He was somewhat prominent as an ecclesiast, and he was a Sunday School worker in his ward. ❋ Frank Jenne Cannon (1902)

Neither an ecclesiast nor a dicast was, therefore, paid so much as a common sailor. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)

[Isoc. de Antidosi.] [297] The pay of the dicast and the ecclesiast was, as we have just seen, first one, then three obols; and the money paid to the infirm was never less than one, nor more than two obols a day. ❋ Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1838)

We are students of history; we're aware that Pope Julius II della Rovere was the great patron of Michelangelo and Raphael, and that the ecclesiast was single-handedly responsible for the commission of some of the works of art of all time - work that even we can't be cynical of. ❋ Unknown (2009)

"king ecclesiast," shaking his head over the orgies of sap and song in which he can no longer share. ❋ Richard Le Gallienne (1906)

"Hypomnesticon contra Pelagianos et Cœlestianos" (Corpus scriptor.ecclesiast. latin., ❋ 1840-1916 (1913)

Some ecclesiast rises in the pulpit and reads from his list: "It is moved and seconded that we sustain Joseph F. Smith as Prophet, Seer and Revelator to all the world. ❋ Frank Jenne Cannon (1902)

Yet in the face of all these exaction's of tithes and donations, the ecclesiast still boasts: "We are not like the ❋ Frank Jenne Cannon (1902)

Cross Reference for Ecclesiast

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