different between ecclesiastical vs impropriator
ecclesiastical
English
Etymology
ecclesiastic +? -al
Pronunciation
- (Canada) IPA(key): /??kli.zi?æ.st?.k?l/
- (UK) IPA(key): /??kli?.zi?æ.st?.k?l/
Adjective
ecclesiastical (comparative more ecclesiastical, superlative most ecclesiastical)
- Of or pertaining to the church.
- Synonyms: churchical, churchlike, churchly, (less common) ecclesiastic
Alternative forms
- ecclesiasticall (obsolete)
Antonyms
Derived terms
- Ecclesiastical Latin
Related terms
- see Ecclesiastes
Translations
See also
- Appendix:Ecclesiastical terms
ecclesiastical From the web:
- what ecclesiastical parish do i live in
- what ecclesiastical mean
- what's ecclesiastical authority
- what is ecclesiastical law
- what does ecclesiastical mean in the bible
- what is ecclesiastical history
- what is ecclesiastical endorsement
- what is ecclesiastical year
impropriator
English
Etymology
impropriate +? -or
Noun
impropriator (plural impropriators)
- (archaic) A layperson in possession of ecclesiastical property.
impropriator From the web:
- what expropriator means
- what does expropriation
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- ecclesiastical vs impropriator
- impropriator vs impropriate
- novelises vs novelizes
- novelised vs novelises
- novelish vs novelist
- suresir vs yessir
- yessirree vs yessir
- yessiree vs yessir
- assent vs yessir
- militerisation vs militarization
- weaponizaton vs militarization
- militar vs military
- exemplified vs militar
- recapitalises vs recapitalised
- decapitalised vs recapitalised
- recapitalises vs recapitalizes
- decapitalizes vs recapitalizes
- decapitalized vs decapitalised
- decapitalized vs decapitalizes
- decriminalized vs decriminalize