different between unpriest vs unprest
unpriest
English
Etymology
un- +? priest
Verb
unpriest (third-person singular simple present unpriests, present participle unpriesting, simple past and past participle unpriested)
- (transitive) To deprive of priesthood; to unfrock.
- 1644 July, John Milton, The Judgment of Martin Bucer touching Divorce, Book II, Chapter XXIV, tr. of Martin Bucer, De Regno Christi.
- 1644 July, John Milton, The Judgment of Martin Bucer touching Divorce, Book II, Chapter XXIV, tr. of Martin Bucer, De Regno Christi.
Noun
unpriest (plural unpriests)
- (rare) One who is not a priest.
Anagrams
- reinputs, repunits, unripest
unpriest From the web:
- what a priest says at a wedding
- what a priest
- what a priest wears
- what a priest does
- what a priest wears at mass
- what a priest says at a funeral
- what a priest in training called
- what a priest says to marry someone
unprest
English
Adjective
unprest (comparative more unprest, superlative most unprest)
- Obsolete form of unpressed.
Anagrams
- Turpens, prusten, punster, punters, turneps
unprest From the web:
- what does prestigious mean
- what does prestigious
- what is the meaning of prestigious
- what's the meaning of prestigious
- what is a prestigious
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