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prelate

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prelate

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Christianity
prel·ate /ˈprelət/ noun [countable]  RRCa bishop, cardinal, or other important priest in the Christian church 〔主教、枢机主教等〕高级神职人员,高级教士
Examples from the Corpus
prelatePrimates and prelates exercised political power most effectively when they were moving in support of magnate opposition; against united barons they were impotent.The newly elected prelate still needed ecclesiastical consecration before he could exercise his pastoral functions.In these years he was frequently a proctor for prelates and religious institutions in Parliament.The court of Gascony, composed of prelates and barons, was to be consulted to this end.The immediate impact of this event was to dissuade other prelates from publicly defending the king.Much of the blame for the schism is generally attributed to Nikon, the overbearing prelate elevated to the Patriarchate in 1652.The prelates were concerned, as explicit statements show, primarily to defend the church's liberties.The line of the living began with prelates in grand clothes, the Pope leading.
Origin prelate (1200-1300) Old French Medieval Latin praelatus someone preferred, someone given a job, from the past participle of Latin praeferre; → PREFER
prel·ate nounChineseSyllable
priest cardinal, in Corpus the bishop, other a or important


prelate
prelate /ˈprelət, ˈprelɪt/ noun [countable]
 Date: 1200-1300
 Language: Old French
 Origin: Medieval Latin praelatus 'someone preferred, someone given a job', from the past participle of Latin praeferre; prefer
a bishop, cardinal, or other important priest in the Christian church


prel·ateBrE /ˈprelət/ 🔊NAmE /ˈprelət/ 🔊 noun (formal) a priest of high rank in the Christian Church, such as a bishop or cardinal (基督教会的)高级教士,高级神职人员