different between parish vs nonage

parish

English

Alternative forms

  • paroch (Scotland, obsolete)

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?pæ???/, /?p????/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?pæ???/
  • Homophone: perish (Marymarrymerry merger)
  • Hyphenation: par?ish

Etymology 1

From Middle English parisshe, from Old French paroisse (compare the obsolete variant paroch, from Anglo-Norman paroche, parosse), from Late Latin parochia, from Ancient Greek ???????? (paroikía, a dwelling abroad).

Noun

parish (plural parishes)

  1. In the Anglican, Eastern Orthodox, Lutheran and Roman Catholic Church, an administrative part of a diocese that has its own church.
  2. The community attending that church; the members of the parish.
  3. (US) An ecclesiastical society, usually not bounded by territorial limits, but composed of those persons who choose to unite under the charge of a particular priest, clergyman, or minister; also, loosely, the territory in which the members of a congregation live.
  4. A civil subdivision of a British county, often corresponding to an earlier ecclesiastical parish.
  5. An administrative subdivision in the U.S. state of Louisiana that is equivalent to a county in other U.S. states.

Derived terms

Related terms

  • parochial

Translations

Verb

parish (third-person singular simple present parishes, present participle parishing, simple past and past participle parished)

  1. (transitive) To place (an area, or rarely a person) into one or more parishes.
    • 1917, Annual Report of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Board of Home Missions and Church Extension, page 70:
      [] [m]akes possible, through the aid of the rural ministers, the development of the various phases of the District program, such as (a) Parishing of the District; (b) Interdenominational adjustment in the interest of rural religious advance []
    • 1972, Winter's Tales from Ireland, volume 2, page 55:
      Father Malachy, a distant cousin, who was parished somewhere in the depths of Co. Monaghan, sat firmly in the chair in the corner, sipping his tea from a china cup.
    • 1991, Melissa Bradley Kirkpatrick, Re-parishing the Countryside: Progressivism and Religious Interests in Rural Life Reform, 1908-1934
    • 1992, Parish and town councils in England: a survey, pages 17 and 21:
      Consequently, approaching half of the non-metropolitan population of England is parished (Table 2.2).
      []
      The South West and East Midlands are also particularly well parished while the North West, West Midlands and South East are poorly parished.
    • 2011, Sustainable development in the Localism Bill: third report ?ISBN, page 5
      Dr Whitehead: In your written evidence, you have all in different ways made the distinction between NDOs in parished areas and NDOs in non-parished areas, []
  2. (intransitive) To visit residents of a parish.
    • 1896, Mrs. Humphry Ward, Sir George Tressady, volume 1 ?ISBN:
      [] a chair immediately opposite to Tressady's place remained vacant. It was being kept for the eldest son of the house, his mother explaining carelessly to Lord Fontenoy that she believed he was "Out parishing somewhere, as usual."
    • 1903, Maxwell Gray, Richard Rosny, page 210:
      "You will take pleasure in parishing. Mother used to parish."
      "How do you know I like parishing?"
      "Your uncle said so."
      "Oh! did he?"
      "And you may like the rectory people; it's a fine old house, and often full of visitors."
    • 1921, Margaret Pedler, The Splendid Folly, page 46:
      "Are you going ‘parishing’ this morning?" inquired Diana, as she watched him fill and light his pipe.

Etymology 2

Verb

parish (third-person singular simple present parishes, present participle parishing, simple past and past participle parished)

  1. Pronunciation spelling of perish, representing Mary-marry-merry English.

Anagrams

  • Phairs, Shairp, raphis

Middle English

Noun

parish

  1. Alternative form of parisshe

parish From the web:

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  • what parish is shreveport in
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  • what parish is lafayette in
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nonage

English

Etymology 1

From Anglo-Norman nounage, corresponding to non- +? age.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?n??n?d?/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?no?n?d?/

Noun

nonage (plural nonages)

  1. The state of being under legal age; minority, the fact of being a minor. [from 15th c.]
    • 1592, William Shakespeare, Richard III, Act II, Scene 3, [1]
      In him there is a hope of government, / That in his nonage council under him, / And in his full and ripen'd years himself, / No doubt, shall then and till then govern well.
    • c. 1608, John Donne, A Litany, stanza VI, "The Angels" in The Poems of John Donne, edited by Edmund Kerchever Chambers, London: Lawrence & Bullen, 1896, [2]
      And since this life our nonage is, / And we in wardship to Thine angels be, / Native in heaven's fair palaces / Where we shall be but denizen'd by Thee;
    • 1723, Charles Walker, Memoirs of the Life of Sally Salisbury:
      The other he used to recreate himself with, after he had been solemnly Contracted to his intended Spouse who was in her Nonage, and kept her till his Wife was ripe for Consummation.
    • 1917, James Cabell, The Cream of the Jest, New York: Modern Library, 1922, Chapter 39, p. 235, [3]
      Romancers, from Time's nonage, have invented and have manipulated a host of staple severances for their puppet lovers []
    • 1924, Herman Melville, Billy Budd, London: Constable & Co., Chapter 17, [4]
      Which appeal caused but a strange dumb gesturing and gurgling in Billy; amazement at such an accusation so suddenly sprung on inexperienced nonage []

Etymology 2

From Late Latin nonagium, from n?nus (ninth).

Noun

nonage (plural nonages)

  1. (obsolete, rare) A payment formerly made to the parish clergy upon the death of a parishioner, consisting of a ninth of the movable goods.

Anagrams

  • Genoan, gonane

nonage From the web:

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