different between laity vs laymen
laity
English
Etymology
From Anglo-Norman laite, from Latin laitas, from Ancient Greek ???? (laós, “people”).
Pronunciation
- (UK, US) IPA(key): /?le?.?.ti/, /?le?.?.ti/
- Rhymes: -e??ty
Noun
laity (plural laities)
- People of a church who are not ordained clergy or clerics.
- The common man or woman.
- The unlearned, untrained or ignorant.
Related terms
- lay
- layman
Translations
Anagrams
- -ality, Italy
laity From the web:
- what laity means
- what laity means in spanish
- laity what is the definition
- what is laity sunday
- what is laity in the catholic church
- what is laity in the church
- what does laity mean in religion
- what does laity mean in the catholic church
laymen
English
Noun
laymen
- plural of layman
Anagrams
- Manley, Melany, meanly, namely, yelman
laymen From the web:
- layman means
- what does layman mean
- layman's terms
- what is laymen ministries
- what does layman's terms mean
- what does payment mean
- what do laymen ministries believe
- what are laymen or laypeople
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- laity vs laymen
- laity vs lait
- laity vs laical
- laity vs monkery
- laicization vs laicize
- metastatic vs malignant
- metastastic vs metastatic
- metastatic vs metastasic
- metastatic vs etaracizumab
- metastatic vs capecitabine
- metastatic vs nonmetastatic
- metastatic vs pyaemia
- prometastatic vs metastatic
- metastatic vs metastasis
- metastasic vs metastastic
- bacteremia vs pyaemia
- pyaemia vs pyaemic
- staphylococcus vs pyaemia
- septicemia vs pyaemia
- pyemia vs pyaemia