different between protestant vs sectary
protestant
English
Etymology
See Protestant. The legal sense either has the same source or is simply protest +? -ant.
Adjective
protestant (comparative more protestant, superlative most protestant)
- Alternative letter-case form of Protestant
- protesting
Noun
protestant (plural protestants)
- (chiefly law) One who protests; a protester.
- 1915 November 3, decision in the case of the State of New Mexico v. Garrett, published in 1916 among the Decisions of the Department of the Interior in Cases Relating to Public Lands, volume 44 (edited by George J Hesselman), page 490: In the case of Hyacinthe Villeneuve a homestead entry had been allowed upon a tract of land that had been patented to the Santa Fe Railroad Company, whose grantees had expressed a willingness to reconvey in order that effect might be given to the equities of the homesteader, whereas in the present case the State stands in the position of a protestant.
- Alternative letter-case form of Protestant
Catalan
Adjective
protestant (masculine and feminine plural protestants)
- Protestant
Noun
protestant m or f (plural protestants)
- Protestant
Derived terms
- protestantisme
Verb
protestant
- present participle of protestar
Further reading
- “protestant” in Diccionari de la llengua catalana, segona edició, Institut d’Estudis Catalans.
- “protestant” in Gran Diccionari de la Llengua Catalana, Grup Enciclopèdia Catalana.
- “protestant” in Diccionari normatiu valencià, Acadèmia Valenciana de la Llengua.
- “protestant” in Diccionari català-valencià-balear, Antoni Maria Alcover and Francesc de Borja Moll, 1962.
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?prot?stant]
Noun
protestant m
- Protestant (person)
Related terms
- protestantství n
Dutch
Etymology
From French protestant, from Latin pr?test?r? 'to testify'.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: pro?tes?tant
Noun
protestant m (plural protestanten, diminutive protestantje n)
- Protestant (a modern Christian denomination not belonging to the Catholic or Orthodox traditions)
French
Etymology
From protester +? -ant. Influenced by German Protestant.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p??.t?s.t??/
Adjective
protestant (feminine singular protestante, masculine plural protestants, feminine plural protestantes)
- Protestant
- Hyponym: calviniste
Related terms
- protestantisme
Verb
protestant
- present participle of protester
Noun
protestant m (plural protestants, feminine protestante)
- Protestant (person)
- Synonym: parpaillot
- Hyponym: calviniste
Further reading
- “protestant” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Norwegian Bokmål
Noun
protestant m (definite singular protestanten, indefinite plural protestanter, definite plural protestantene)
- a Protestant (follower of Protestantism; member of a Protestant church)
Derived terms
- protestantisk
Norwegian Nynorsk
Noun
protestant m (definite singular protestanten, indefinite plural protestantar, definite plural protestantane)
- a Protestant (as above)
Derived terms
- protestantisk
Polish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pr??t?.stant/
Noun
protestant m pers (feminine protestantka)
- Protestant
- (archaic) protest participant
Declension
Further reading
- protestant in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Romanian
Etymology
From French protestant.
Noun
protestant m (plural protestan?i)
- Protestant
Declension
Serbo-Croatian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /prot?stant/
- Hyphenation: pro?te?stant
Noun
protèstant m (Cyrillic spelling ??????????)
- (Christianity) Protestant
Declension
Swedish
Etymology
protest +? -ant
Noun
protestant c
- a Protestant; one who follows the practice of the Christian form of Protestantism
Declension
Related terms
- protestantism
- protestantisk
protestant From the web:
- what protestants believe
- what protestant church developed the psalter
- what protestant religion believes in predestination
- what protestant reformation
- what protestants believe about mary
- what protestant churches believe in predestination
- what protestant denomination am i
- what protestant religion is closest to catholicism
sectary
English
Etymology
Either from the French sectaire or directly from its etymon, the Medieval Latin sect?rius, from secta (“sect”). Cognates include the Italian settario and the Portuguese and Spanish sectario.
Noun
sectary (plural sectaries)
- A member of a particular sect, school of thought or practice, party, or profession; a sectarian.
- 1953, T.V. Smith, “Democratic Apologetics” in Ethics LXIII, ? 2 (January 1953), page 106, left column:
- It is this spirit which inspires sectaries to deprecate the public schools and, if they cannot divert part of the tax support, then to foist upon this free system the shadow of their own beclouded vision.
- 1953, T.V. Smith, “Democratic Apologetics” in Ethics LXIII, ? 2 (January 1953), page 106, left column:
- (Christianity) A Protestant dissenter or nonconformist.
Translations
Further reading
- sectary at OneLook Dictionary Search
- sectary in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
Anagrams
- Treacys
sectary From the web:
- what secretary of state is open
- what secretary of state
- what secretary of state do
- what secretary of state is open on saturday
- what secretary of state is open today
- what secretary of state offices are open
- what secretary do
- what secretary of state does
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