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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
preacher
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
lay
▪ Nonni was the daughter of a prosperous dealer in scrap metal who had also been a lay preacher.
▪ A non-conformist lay preacher, he fought the November byelection.
▪ A lay preacher, his house was the meeting-place of a gathered church by 1649.
▪ Many of its earlier leaders were lay preachers who entered politics in order to apply their religious ideals in practical ways.
▪ Les was a bit of a lay preacher, but did not push his views on anyone.
local
▪ The Teesside-born star trained as a Methodist local preacher when he was a teenager in Middlesbrough, but is now an atheist.
■ VERB
become
▪ But one way of making your mark was to become a preacher.
▪ From boyhood he worked on local farms and became an itinerant Methodist preacher.
▪ Enjoying better health than for many years, he was able to become an active preacher.
▪ Some of these were also converted through Baxter's ministry and became preachers themselves.
▪ Perhaps I was wrong to become a preacher.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As a military leader, the prophet Joshua knew the importance of engaging the enemy, the preacher continues.
▪ For years marginal radio stations paid the rent with late-night or Sunday-morning preacher shows, which they aired for cash up front.
▪ He was born in Limavady in 1839, the son of a Methodist preacher, William Guard.
▪ The preacher turned his volume up.
▪ There are so many great preachers there.
▪ They could have been greengrocers, insurance salesmen, buggy repairmen, schoolteachers, congressmen or even preachers as much as criminals.
▪ They give point to the cries of the preachers for repentance, conversion, and return to the old religion.
▪ Vanity, all is vanity, saith the preacher.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Preacher

Preacher \Preach"er\ (pr[=e]ch"[~e]r), n. [Cf. OF. preeschierre, prescheur, F. pr[^e]cheur, L. praedicator.]

  1. One who preaches; one who discourses publicly on religious subjects.

    How shall they hear without a preacher?
    --Rom. x. 14.

  2. One who inculcates anything with earnestness.

    No preacher is listened to but Time.
    --Swift.

    Preacher bird (Zo["o]l.), a toucan.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
preacher

c.1200, from Old French preecheor "preacher" (Modern French prêcheur), from Latin praedicatorem (nominative praedicator) "public praiser, eulogist," literally "proclaimer" (see preach). Slang short form preach (n.) is recorded by 1968, American English.

Wiktionary
preacher

n. Someone who preaches a worldview, philosophy(,) or religion, especially someone who preaches the Quran or the gospel; a clergyman.

WordNet
preacher

n. someone whose occupation is preaching the gospel [syn: preacher man, sermonizer, sermoniser]

Wikipedia
Preacher (comics)

Preacher is an American comic book series published by Vertigo, an imprint of DC Comics. The series was created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Steve Dillon with painted covers by Glenn Fabry.

The series consists of 75 issues in total - 66 regular, monthly issues, five one-shot specials and a four-issue Preacher: Saint of Killers limited series. The entire run has been collected in nine trade paperback editions. The final monthly issue, number 66, was published in October 2000.

Preacher

A preacher usually identifies a person who delivers sermons or homilies on religious topics to an assembly of people. Less common are preachers who preach on the street, or those whose message is not necessarily religious, but who preach components such as a moral or social worldview or philosophy.

Preacher (disambiguation)

A preacher is someone who preaches sermons.

Preacher may also refer to:

Preacher (TV series)

Preacher is an American television series developed by Evan Goldberg, Seth Rogen and Sam Catlin for AMC starring Dominic Cooper. It is an adaptation of the comic book series created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, and published by DC Comics' Vertigo imprint. The series was officially picked up on September 9, 2015, with a ten-episode order which premiered on May 22, 2016. On June 29, 2016, AMC renewed the series for a 13-episode second season to air in 2017.

Usage examples of "preacher".

Longarm pleaded, not really expecting that the preacher would do anything more than rattle the ambusher and perhaps give Longarm a chance to escape back down the slope to good cover.

I had never been placed for instruction under any Antinomian theologian, and had never been taught at home, either by word or deed, to wrest the Scriptures from their plain and simple meaning, I naturally became a thoroughly practical preacher.

The new technology of radio had forced briskness and brevity on professional speakers, such as politicians, who were accustomed to orating on the stump for three hours at a stretch, and preachers, sometimes drilling words into their listeners at speeds that reached two hundred words a minute.

One of the first preachers of Lutheranism in Scotland was a Frenchman named La Tour, who was martyred on his return to his own country.

Somehow Alinor had gotten himself mixed up with a desperate mother, her kidnapped and mediumistic child, and a looney-tune preacher.

I know you are anxious to learn what, in the first instance, led me to identify a millenarian preacher with a receiver of stolen property.

A similar false note is struck by any speaker or writer who misapprehends his position or forgets his disqualifications, by newspaper writers using language that is seemly only in one who stakes his life on his words, by preachers exceeding the license of fallibility, by moralists condemning frailty, by speculative traders deprecating frank ways of hazard, by Satan rebuking sin.

The haranguers were back after the rain: preachers for bizarre religions, recruiters for little outwoods colonies, proponents of strange social ideals.

Reverend Penton Adams of the Church of Sanctified Apostles was a hellfire-and-brimstone preacher.

Scottish preachers of the perfervid type used to refer to it, he was most keen.

In place of the dean and chapter, the precentor, and chancellor--all removed--four city preachers were chosen by the Assembly of Divines, and paid out of the revenues of the minster.

Hatrack River he knew was the village of his prenticeship, with a town square and a church with a preacher and Whitley Physicker to tend the sick and even a post office and enough folks with enough children that they got them up a subscription and hired them a schoolteacher.

But the test oath prescribed after the Civil War, whereby office holders, teachers, or preachers were required to swear that they had not participated in the Rebellion, were held invalid on the ground that it had no reasonable relation to fitness to perform official or professional duties, but rather was a punishment for past offenses.

Not far from Berne, Switzerland, the wife of John Gelinger, a preacher in the Lordship of Berne, brought forth twins, and within a year after she brought forth quintuplets, 3 sons and 2 daughters.

As the weather had warmed that spring, there had been an influx of preachers onto Fifth Avenue, a scattered flock of rackety birds migrating in from some dark, harsh land.