different between coadjutor vs confederate

coadjutor

English

Etymology

From Old French coadjuteur, from Latin coadi?tor, from co- + adi?tor (helper).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /k????d?u?t?/, /k???ad??t?/

Noun

coadjutor (plural coadjutors)

  1. An assistant or helper.
    • 1891, Mary Noailles Murfree, In the "Stranger People's" Country, Nebraska 2005, pp. 206-7:
      The mountaineer, with all his pulses aquiver, looked down into his coadjutor’s white, startled face.
    • 1924, Herman Melville, Billy Budd, London: Constable & Co., Chapter 12, [1]
      Hitherto I have been but the witness, little more; and I should hardly think now to take another tone, that of your coadjutor, for the time, did I not perceive in you,—at the crisis too—a troubled hesitancy, proceeding, I doubt not, from the clash of military duty with moral scruple—scruple vitalized by compassion.
  2. (ecclesiastical) An assistant to a bishop.
    • 1842 John Henry Newman - The Ecclesiastical History of M. L'abbé Fleury:
      When old age rendered any Bishop unable to perform his duties, the first example of which occurs AD 211, when Alexander became coadjutor to Narcissus at Jerusalem
    • 2005 James Martin Estes - Peace, Order and the Glory of God:
      August then appointed Prince George III of Anhalt (who was both a theologian and a priest as well as a prince) to be his coadjutor in spiritual matters.

Translations


Spanish

Noun

coadjutor m (plural coadjutores)

  1. coadjutor

coadjutor From the web:

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confederate

English

Alternative forms

  • confœderate (archaic)

Pronunciation

  • (noun, adjective) IPA(key): /k?n?f?d???t/
  • (verb) IPA(key): /k?n?f?d??e?t/

Noun

confederate (plural confederates)

  1. A member of a confederacy.
  2. An accomplice in a plot.
  3. (psychology) An actor who participates in a psychological experiment pretending to be a subject but in actuality working for the researcher (also known as a "stooge").

Translations

Adjective

confederate (comparative more confederate, superlative most confederate)

  1. of, relating to, or united in a confederacy
  2. banded together; allied.

Quotations

  • Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Youth's Antiphony, lines 11-12
    Hour after hour, remote from the world's throng,
    Work, contest, fame, all life's confederate pleas

Translations

Verb

confederate (third-person singular simple present confederates, present participle confederating, simple past and past participle confederated)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To combine in a confederacy.

Italian

Adjective

confederate

  1. feminine plural of confederato

Noun

confederate f pl

  1. plural of confederata

Verb

confederate

  1. second-person plural present indicative of confederare
  2. second-person plural imperative of confederare
  3. feminine plural of confederato

confederate From the web:

  • what confederate general was killed at the battle of shiloh
  • what confederate general surrendered to the union
  • what confederate general was in charge of the army at vicksburg
  • what confederate general died from wounds at chancellorsville
  • what confederate general died at chancellorsville
  • what confederate general was killed at the battle of chancellorsville
  • what confederate statues are still up
  • what confederate generals were at gettysburg
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