'synodic; relating to a synod'에 대한 English 단어
"synodic; relating to a synod"에 가장 가까운 후보는 사전 정의와의 의미적 적합도 순으로 정렬됩니다.
검색 결과
- (ecclesiastical) An assembly of the clergy, by their representatives, to consult on ecclesiastical affairs.
- An assembly or meeting.
- An academic assembly, in which the business of a university is transacted.
- The act of calling or assembling by summons.
- (collective) A flock of eagles.
- a group gathered in response to a summons
- the act of convoking
- (Christianity) An ecclesiastic council or meeting to consult on church matters.
- (astronomy) A conjunction of two or more of the heavenly bodies.
- An assembly or council having civil authority (formal); a legislative body.
- (Christianity) An administrative division of churches, either the entire denomination, as in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, or a mid-level division (middle judicatory, district) as in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
- a council convened to discuss ecclesiastical business
- The office or jurisdiction of a syndic; a body or council of syndics.
- A group of individuals or companies formed to transact some specific business, or to promote a common interest; a self-coordinating group.
- (crime) A group of gangsters engaged in organized crime.
- (mass media) A group of media companies, or an agency, formed to acquire content such as articles, cartoons, etc., and to publish it in multiple outlets; a chain of newspapers or other media outlets managed by such an organization.
- a loose affiliation of gangsters in charge of organized criminal activities
- a news agency that sells features or articles or photographs etc. to newspapers for simultaneous publication
- an association of companies for some definite purpose
- (intransitive) To become a syndicate.
- (transitive) To put under the control of a group acting as a unit.
- (transitive, mass media) To release media content through a syndicate to be broadcast or published through multiple outlets.
- sell articles, television programs, or photos to several publications or independent broadcasting stations
- join together into a syndicate
- organize into or form a syndicate
- A bishop's council.
- An organized branch of some society or fraternity, such as the Freemasons.
- An administrative division of an organization, usually local to a specific area.
- A sequence (of events), especially when presumed related and likely to continue.
- An assembly of monks, prebendaries and/or other clergymen connected with a cathedral, conventual or collegiate church, or of a diocese, usually presided over by the dean.
- (Roman Catholicism) A prescribed reading at one of the canonical hours.
- A community of canons or canonesses.
- A section of a work, a collection of works, or fragments of works, often manuscripts or transcriptions, created by scholars or advocates, not the original authors, to aid in finding portions of the texts.
- A chapter house
- One of the main sections into which a published work is divided, especially a book.
- A meeting of a chapter of certain organized societies or orders.
- a subdivision of a written work; usually numbered and titled
- a series of related events forming an episode
- a local branch of some fraternity or association
- an ecclesiastical assembly of the monks in a monastery or even of the canons of a church
- any distinct period in history or in a person's life
- The collective body of (ecclesiastical) elders; a body or court of elders, a presbytery.
- The smallest administrative division in Lithuania, equivalent to a ward.
- The office or position of elder in a church.
- The position of being elder or senior; seniority, precedence of birth, primogeniture.
- (nonce word, as a mock title of honour) The personality of an elderly person.
- the office of elder
- Pertaining to or relating to the church, its government, forms, or ceremonies; ecclesiastical.
- Characteristic of a church; churchy.
- Devoted to, or inclined to attach great importance to, the order and ritual of a particular section of the Christian church.
- In accordance with ecclesiastical standards or ceremonies; appropriate for or befitting a church.
- resembling or suggesting or appropriate to a church
- (Church of England) Initialism of parochial church council.
- (organic chemistry) Initialism of pyridinium chlorochromate.
- (England and Wales) Initialism of police and crime commissioner.
- (statistics) Initialism of Pearson correlation coefficient.
- (travel) Initialism of pseudo-city code (a short alpha-numeric code used to represent the location that a GDS is operated from.)
- (biochemistry) Initialism of protein-conducting channel.
- (law enforcement) Initialism of police clearance certificate.
- (Christianity) A member of a church council.
- (computing) The archived older version of a file that immediately precedes the current version, and was itself derived from the grandfather.
- Something that is the greatest or most significant of its kind.
- A male who has sired a baby; this person in relation to his child or children.
- A male ancestor more remote than a parent; a progenitor; especially, a first ancestor.
- Something inanimate that begets.
- A term of respectful address for a priest.
- A pioneering figure in a particular field.
- A term of respectful address for an elderly man.
- A male parent, especially of a human; a male who parents a child (which he has sired, adopted, fostered, taken as his own, etc.).
- A person who plays the role of a father in some way.
- a person who holds an important or distinguished position in some organization
- a male parent (also used as a term of address to your father)
- the head of an organized crime family
- the founder of a family
- a person who founds or establishes some institution
- (by extension, in the plural) The congregation of a church.
- An enclosed compartment in a church which provides seating for a group of people, often a prominent family.
- Any structure shaped like a church pew, such as a stall, formerly used by money lenders, etc.; a box in a theatre; or a pen or sheepfold.
- One of the long benches in a church, seating several persons, usually fixed to the floor and facing the chancel.
- (colloquial, humorous) A chair; a seat.
- long bench with backs; used in church by the congregation
- Presbyters collectively; the body of presbyters of a congregation.
- The district (jurisdiction) of those presbyters.
- A section of a church reserved for the clergy, containing the altar.
- A body of elders in the early Christian church.
- The home of a Roman Catholic parish priest.
- building reserved for the officiating clergy
- A solemn assembly or council.
- a church tribunal or governing body
- The spiritual court of a diocesan bishop held before his chancellor or commissioner in his cathedral church or elsewhere.
- An assembly of prelates; a session of the College of Cardinals at Rome.
- A church tribunal or governing body, especially of elders in a Reformed church.
- A Roman Congregation, a main department of the Vatican administration of the Catholic Church.
- A gathering of faithful in a temple, church, synagogue, mosque or other place of worship. It can also refer to the people who are present at a devotional service in the building, particularly in contrast to the pastor, minister, imam, rabbi etc. and/or choir, who may be seated apart from the general congregation or lead the service (notably in responsory form).
- A corporate body whose members gather for worship, or the members of such a body.
- (UK, Oxford University) The main body of university staff, comprising academics, administrative staff, heads of colleges, etc.
- Any large gathering of people.
- A flock of various birds, such as plovers or eagles.
- The act of congregating or collecting together.
- a group of people who adhere to a common faith and habitually attend a given church
- the act of congregating
- an assemblage of people or animals or things collected together
- (Christianity) Short for church council
- (UK, metonymic) A local authority.
- A committee that leads or governs (e.g. city council, student council).
- Discussion or deliberation.
- a meeting of people for consultation
- a body serving in an administrative capacity
- (Christianity) an assembly of theologians and bishops and other representatives of different churches or dioceses that is convened to regulate matters of discipline or doctrine
- in the Presbyterian church, the officer who presides over a synod or general assembly
- someone who presides over a forum or debate
- someone who mediates disputes and attempts to avoid violence
- any substance used to slow down neutrons in nuclear reactors
- (Ireland) At the University of Dublin, either the first (senior) or second (junior) in rank in an examination for the degree of Bachelor of Arts.
- (nuclear physics) A substance (often water or graphite) used to decrease the speed of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor and hence increase likelihood of fission.
- (UK) Someone who supervises and monitors the setting and marking of examinations by different people to ensure consistency of standards.
- (UK) An examiner at Oxford and Cambridge universities.
- (historical) A kind of lamp in which the flow of the oil to the wick is regulated.
- Someone who moderates.
- The chair or president of a meeting, etc.
- The person who presides over a synod of a Presbyterian church.
- (Internet) A person who enforces the rules of a discussion forum by deleting posts, banning users, etc.
- An arbitrator or mediator.
- A mechanical arrangement for regulating motion in a machine, or producing equality of effect.
- A device used to deaden some of the noise from a firearm, although not to the same extent as a suppressor or silencer.
- Of or pertaining to the Roman Catholic Church or the Holy See.
- Of noble countenance but with little facial expression.
- (historical) Of or from the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) Of or from the Byzantine Empire.
- Of or from Rome.
- (of type or text) Supporting the characters of the Latin alphabet.
- (architecture) Of a style characterised by the size and boldness of its round arches and vaults, and having baths, aqueducts, basilicas, amphitheatres, etc.
- (typography) A font that is upright, as opposed to oblique or italic. (See roman font.)
- (law, colloquial) Used to distinguish a Roman numeral from an Arabic numeral in oral discourse.
- of or relating to or derived from Rome (especially ancient Rome)
- characteristic of the modern type that most directly represents the type used in ancient Roman inscriptions
- of or relating to or supporting Romanism
- (uncountable) The Roman script.
- A native or resident of Rome.
- (historical) A native or resident of the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) A native or resident of the Byzantine Empire.
- (printing, countable) A single letter or character in Roman type.
- an inhabitant of the ancient Roman Empire
- a resident of modern Rome
noun
noun
noun
noun
verb
noun
verb
adj
name
noun
noun
adj
noun
verb
noun
verb
adj
adj
noun
noun
intj
verb
noun
adj
noun
noun
adj
verb
adj
noun
noun
noun
noun
noun
adj
name
noun
- (ecclesiastical) An assembly of the clergy, by their representatives, to consult on ecclesiastical affairs.
- An assembly or meeting.
- An academic assembly, in which the business of a university is transacted.
- The act of calling or assembling by summons.
- (collective) A flock of eagles.
- a group gathered in response to a summons
- the act of convoking
- (Christianity) An ecclesiastic council or meeting to consult on church matters.
- (astronomy) A conjunction of two or more of the heavenly bodies.
- An assembly or council having civil authority (formal); a legislative body.
- (Christianity) An administrative division of churches, either the entire denomination, as in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, or a mid-level division (middle judicatory, district) as in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
- a council convened to discuss ecclesiastical business
- The office or jurisdiction of a syndic; a body or council of syndics.
- A group of individuals or companies formed to transact some specific business, or to promote a common interest; a self-coordinating group.
- (crime) A group of gangsters engaged in organized crime.
- (mass media) A group of media companies, or an agency, formed to acquire content such as articles, cartoons, etc., and to publish it in multiple outlets; a chain of newspapers or other media outlets managed by such an organization.
- a loose affiliation of gangsters in charge of organized criminal activities
- a news agency that sells features or articles or photographs etc. to newspapers for simultaneous publication
- an association of companies for some definite purpose
- (intransitive) To become a syndicate.
- (transitive) To put under the control of a group acting as a unit.
- (transitive, mass media) To release media content through a syndicate to be broadcast or published through multiple outlets.
- sell articles, television programs, or photos to several publications or independent broadcasting stations
- join together into a syndicate
- organize into or form a syndicate
- A bishop's council.
- An organized branch of some society or fraternity, such as the Freemasons.
- An administrative division of an organization, usually local to a specific area.
- A sequence (of events), especially when presumed related and likely to continue.
- An assembly of monks, prebendaries and/or other clergymen connected with a cathedral, conventual or collegiate church, or of a diocese, usually presided over by the dean.
- (Roman Catholicism) A prescribed reading at one of the canonical hours.
- A community of canons or canonesses.
- A section of a work, a collection of works, or fragments of works, often manuscripts or transcriptions, created by scholars or advocates, not the original authors, to aid in finding portions of the texts.
- A chapter house
- One of the main sections into which a published work is divided, especially a book.
- A meeting of a chapter of certain organized societies or orders.
- a subdivision of a written work; usually numbered and titled
- a series of related events forming an episode
- a local branch of some fraternity or association
- an ecclesiastical assembly of the monks in a monastery or even of the canons of a church
- any distinct period in history or in a person's life
- The collective body of (ecclesiastical) elders; a body or court of elders, a presbytery.
- The smallest administrative division in Lithuania, equivalent to a ward.
- The office or position of elder in a church.
- The position of being elder or senior; seniority, precedence of birth, primogeniture.
- (nonce word, as a mock title of honour) The personality of an elderly person.
- the office of elder
- (Church of England) Initialism of parochial church council.
- (organic chemistry) Initialism of pyridinium chlorochromate.
- (England and Wales) Initialism of police and crime commissioner.
- (statistics) Initialism of Pearson correlation coefficient.
- (travel) Initialism of pseudo-city code (a short alpha-numeric code used to represent the location that a GDS is operated from.)
- (biochemistry) Initialism of protein-conducting channel.
- (law enforcement) Initialism of police clearance certificate.
- (Christianity) A member of a church council.
- (computing) The archived older version of a file that immediately precedes the current version, and was itself derived from the grandfather.
- Something that is the greatest or most significant of its kind.
- A male who has sired a baby; this person in relation to his child or children.
- A male ancestor more remote than a parent; a progenitor; especially, a first ancestor.
- Something inanimate that begets.
- A term of respectful address for a priest.
- A pioneering figure in a particular field.
- A term of respectful address for an elderly man.
- A male parent, especially of a human; a male who parents a child (which he has sired, adopted, fostered, taken as his own, etc.).
- A person who plays the role of a father in some way.
- a person who holds an important or distinguished position in some organization
- a male parent (also used as a term of address to your father)
- the head of an organized crime family
- the founder of a family
- a person who founds or establishes some institution
- (by extension, in the plural) The congregation of a church.
- An enclosed compartment in a church which provides seating for a group of people, often a prominent family.
- Any structure shaped like a church pew, such as a stall, formerly used by money lenders, etc.; a box in a theatre; or a pen or sheepfold.
- One of the long benches in a church, seating several persons, usually fixed to the floor and facing the chancel.
- (colloquial, humorous) A chair; a seat.
- long bench with backs; used in church by the congregation
- Presbyters collectively; the body of presbyters of a congregation.
- The district (jurisdiction) of those presbyters.
- A section of a church reserved for the clergy, containing the altar.
- A body of elders in the early Christian church.
- The home of a Roman Catholic parish priest.
- building reserved for the officiating clergy
- A solemn assembly or council.
- a church tribunal or governing body
- The spiritual court of a diocesan bishop held before his chancellor or commissioner in his cathedral church or elsewhere.
- An assembly of prelates; a session of the College of Cardinals at Rome.
- A church tribunal or governing body, especially of elders in a Reformed church.
- A Roman Congregation, a main department of the Vatican administration of the Catholic Church.
- A gathering of faithful in a temple, church, synagogue, mosque or other place of worship. It can also refer to the people who are present at a devotional service in the building, particularly in contrast to the pastor, minister, imam, rabbi etc. and/or choir, who may be seated apart from the general congregation or lead the service (notably in responsory form).
- A corporate body whose members gather for worship, or the members of such a body.
- (UK, Oxford University) The main body of university staff, comprising academics, administrative staff, heads of colleges, etc.
- Any large gathering of people.
- A flock of various birds, such as plovers or eagles.
- The act of congregating or collecting together.
- a group of people who adhere to a common faith and habitually attend a given church
- the act of congregating
- an assemblage of people or animals or things collected together
- (Christianity) Short for church council
- (UK, metonymic) A local authority.
- A committee that leads or governs (e.g. city council, student council).
- Discussion or deliberation.
- a meeting of people for consultation
- a body serving in an administrative capacity
- (Christianity) an assembly of theologians and bishops and other representatives of different churches or dioceses that is convened to regulate matters of discipline or doctrine
- in the Presbyterian church, the officer who presides over a synod or general assembly
- someone who presides over a forum or debate
- someone who mediates disputes and attempts to avoid violence
- any substance used to slow down neutrons in nuclear reactors
- (Ireland) At the University of Dublin, either the first (senior) or second (junior) in rank in an examination for the degree of Bachelor of Arts.
- (nuclear physics) A substance (often water or graphite) used to decrease the speed of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor and hence increase likelihood of fission.
- (UK) Someone who supervises and monitors the setting and marking of examinations by different people to ensure consistency of standards.
- (UK) An examiner at Oxford and Cambridge universities.
- (historical) A kind of lamp in which the flow of the oil to the wick is regulated.
- Someone who moderates.
- The chair or president of a meeting, etc.
- The person who presides over a synod of a Presbyterian church.
- (Internet) A person who enforces the rules of a discussion forum by deleting posts, banning users, etc.
- An arbitrator or mediator.
- A mechanical arrangement for regulating motion in a machine, or producing equality of effect.
- A device used to deaden some of the noise from a firearm, although not to the same extent as a suppressor or silencer.
noun
noun
noun
noun
verb
noun
verb
noun
noun
verb
noun
verb
noun
intj
verb
noun
noun
noun
adj
verb
noun
noun
noun
noun
- Pertaining to or relating to the church, its government, forms, or ceremonies; ecclesiastical.
- Characteristic of a church; churchy.
- Devoted to, or inclined to attach great importance to, the order and ritual of a particular section of the Christian church.
- In accordance with ecclesiastical standards or ceremonies; appropriate for or befitting a church.
- resembling or suggesting or appropriate to a church
- Of or pertaining to the Roman Catholic Church or the Holy See.
- Of noble countenance but with little facial expression.
- (historical) Of or from the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) Of or from the Byzantine Empire.
- Of or from Rome.
- (of type or text) Supporting the characters of the Latin alphabet.
- (architecture) Of a style characterised by the size and boldness of its round arches and vaults, and having baths, aqueducts, basilicas, amphitheatres, etc.
- (typography) A font that is upright, as opposed to oblique or italic. (See roman font.)
- (law, colloquial) Used to distinguish a Roman numeral from an Arabic numeral in oral discourse.
- of or relating to or derived from Rome (especially ancient Rome)
- characteristic of the modern type that most directly represents the type used in ancient Roman inscriptions
- of or relating to or supporting Romanism
- (uncountable) The Roman script.
- A native or resident of Rome.
- (historical) A native or resident of the Roman Empire.
- (historical, historiography) A native or resident of the Byzantine Empire.
- (printing, countable) A single letter or character in Roman type.
- an inhabitant of the ancient Roman Empire
- a resident of modern Rome