different between celebrity vs celebrant

celebrity

English

Etymology

From Middle English celebrit?, from Old French celebrite (compare French célébrité), from Latin cel?brit?s.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /s??l?b??ti/

Noun

celebrity (countable and uncountable, plural celebrities)

  1. (obsolete) A rite or ceremony. [17th-18th c.]
  2. (uncountable) Fame, renown; the state of being famous or talked-about. [from 17th c.]
    Synonyms: big name, distinction, fame, eminence, renown
  3. A person who has a high degree of recognition by the general population for his or her success or accomplishments; a famous person. [from 19th c.]
    Synonyms: big name, star, (informal) celeb, (informal) sleb, luminary, notable, media darling

Derived terms

Related terms

  • celebutard

Translations

References

  • celebrity at OneLook Dictionary Search
  • celebrity in Keywords for Today: A 21st Century Vocabulary, edited by The Keywords Project, Colin MacCabe, Holly Yanacek, 2018.
  • celebrity in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

Spanish

Noun

celebrity m (plural celebritys)

  1. celebrity

celebrity From the web:

  • what celebrity do i look like
  • https://starbyface.com/
  • what celebrity died today
  • what celebrity birthday is today
  • what celebrity died this week
  • what celebrity has the most kids
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  • what celebrity has the highest net worth


celebrant

English

Etymology

French célébrant

Pronunciation

Noun

celebrant (plural celebrants)

  1. A person who officiates at a religious ceremony, especially a marriage or the Eucharist.
    • 1851, John Bate Cardale, Catholic apostolic church services, Readings upon the Liturgy and Other Divine Offices of the Church, page 140,
      The most appropriate mode of ordering the holy vessels at this part of the service, previously to preparing them for the communion, is for the celebrant to place both the patten and the chalice in the middle of the altar, in a line with himself, the chalice behind and the patten in front; for they are presented before God as one Eucharist.
  2. (Australia, New Zealand) A person who conducts formal ceremonies in the community, particularly weddings, baby namings, renewals of wedding vows and funerals.
    • 2006, Timoshenko Aslanides, Occasions for Words: Poems for Birth, Marriage, Death and Much Between, page v,
      When we first began as celebrants back in 1973, we had no poetry in our heads at all.
  3. A person who is celebrating something.
    • 1977 February 10, Gerri Major, Gerri Major's Society World: Inaugural Balls Have Largest Black Participation Ever, JET, page 39,
      Once inside, about all that the celebrants could do was nod their heads to the music and pat their feet.
    • 1997, Thomas Andrew Bailey, David M. Kennedy, The American Spirit: To 1877, page 12,
      The procession began, and the celebrants filed into the temple patio to dance the Dance of the Serpent.

Derived terms

Translations


Catalan

Verb

celebrant

  1. present participle of celebrar

Latin

Verb

celebrant

  1. third-person plural present active indicative of celebr?

celebrant From the web:

  • what celebrant mean
  • what's celebrant in french
  • what celebrant in tagalog
  • celebrant what do they do
  • celebrant what does it mean
  • what do celebrants charge
  • what is celebrant training
  • what a celebrant does
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