prelate

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
9
Words With Friends
11
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/ˈpɹɛlət/ (US)

Definition of prelate

3 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. A clergyman of high rank and authority, having jurisdiction over an area or a group of people; normally a bishop.
    “Hear him but reason in divinity, […] / You would desire the king were made a prelate.”
    “’Tis acknowledg’d on all hands, ſays that learned Prelate, that the Authority, either of the Scripture or of Tradition, is founded merely on the Teſtimony of the Apoſtles, who were Eye-witneſſes to thoſe Miracles of our Saviour, by which he prov’d his divine Miſſion.”
    “Inthronization, in ancient times, immediately succeeded the rite of consecration; the new bishop being honourably placed in his episcopal chair by the prelates assembled for his consecration.”
    “The day before, Cardinal Burke and other traditionalist prelates made public an exchange of letters with Francis in which they aired grave doubts about the legitimacy of a major assembly of the world’s bishops and laypeople that will, on Wednesday, begin discussing some of the most sensitive topics in the church.”
See all 3 definitions

noun

  1. A clergyman of high rank and authority, having jurisdiction over an area or a group of people; normally a bishop.
    “Hear him but reason in divinity, […] / You would desire the king were made a prelate.”
    “’Tis acknowledg’d on all hands, ſays that learned Prelate, that the Authority, either of the Scripture or of Tradition, is founded merely on the Teſtimony of the Apoſtles, who were Eye-witneſſes to thoſe Miracles of our Saviour, by which he prov’d his divine Miſſion.”
    “Inthronization, in ancient times, immediately succeeded the rite of consecration; the new bishop being honourably placed in his episcopal chair by the prelates assembled for his consecration.”
    “The day before, Cardinal Burke and other traditionalist prelates made public an exchange of letters with Francis in which they aired grave doubts about the legitimacy of a major assembly of the world’s bishops and laypeople that will, on Wednesday, begin discussing some of the most sensitive topics in the church.”

verb

  1. (intransitive)(obsolete) To act as a prelate.
    “18 January 1549, Hugh Latimer, Sermon of the Plough Right prelating is busy labouring, and not lording.”

name

  1. A village in Saskatchewan, Canada.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Old French prelat (French prélat), from Medieval Latin praelātus, perfect passive participle of praeferō (“to carry before, prefer, exceed”), see -ate (noun-forming suffix). Doublet of prefer. See also infer, relate and refer, delate and defer, as well as collate and confer among others.

Words you can make from prelate

145 playable · top: PETRALE (9 pts)

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7-letter words

2 words

6-letter words

11 words

5-letter words

32 words

4-letter words

48 words

3-letter words

38 words

2-letter words

13 words

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

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