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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
clergyman
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
anglican
▪ They had six sons, one of whom died young and four of whom became Anglican clergymen, and seven daughters.
▪ I recall another student who was an Anglican clergyman.
▪ In the period 1831-65 no fewer than forty-one Anglican clergymen had presided over its various sections.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He would never understand why she had married a pompous clergyman.
▪ In 1867 she married a clergyman, Frank Besant.
▪ In Leeds, a clergyman, the Rev. Edward Jackson, had found a similar situation.
▪ No wonder our clergymen look anxious, and their congregations confused!
▪ Philanthropists and clergymen had to admit that their own reforming schemes had completely failed.
▪ The besieged were led by a soldier and a clergyman.
▪ The situation is so bad that special seminars are being held to teach clergymen more about security.
▪ When I returned to the drawing room, a clergyman was talking about the hardships being suffered by children in Berlin.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Clergyman

Clergyman \Cler"gy*man\, n.; pl. Clergymen. An ordained minister; a man regularly authorized to preach the gospel, and administer its ordinances; in England usually restricted to a minister of the Established Church.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
clergyman

1570s, from clergy + man (n.).

Wiktionary
clergyman

n. An ordained (male) Christian minister, a male member of the clergy.

WordNet
clergyman

n. a member of the clergy and a spiritual leader of the Christian Church [syn: reverend, man of the cloth] [ant: layman]

Usage examples of "clergyman".

The anticlericalism of the philosophes was widespread in the late eighteenth century, especially among the upper classes, even among certain aristocratic clergymen.

Little Arcady meant him of the Methodist church, the two other clergymen being so young and unimportant as to need identification by name.

He was a clergyman at Odell in Bedfordshire, where the church over which he was settled is still standing.

He was sent to the parish school of Kirkton, and afterwards placed under the tutorship of a Cameronian clergyman, in Denholm, reputed as a classical scholar.

I knew happen to a poor clergyman in Dorsetshire, by the villany of an attorney who, not contented with the exorbitant costs to which the poor man was put by a single action, brought afterwards another action on the judgment, as it was called.

Save for a few surface evils he sees nothing wrong in an acquisitive society, with its equation of money and virtue, its pious millionaires and erastian clergymen.

They were idle ladies and gentlemen under umbrellas, Indians and habitans taking the rain stolidly erect or with shrugged shoulders, and two or three clergymen of the curate type, who might have stepped as they were out of any dull English novel.

Before lunch was finished, both clergymen had ducked into the hatcheck room to ravage two waitresses.

At this Hertford Petty Sessional Division the chairman was a somewhat pompous clergyman, but very devoted to his duties.

This person, who, as Jones likewise knew, lived in Bond-street, was the widow of a clergyman, and was left by him, at his decease, in possession of two daughters, and of a compleat set of manuscript sermons.

His elementary education was conducted at the schools of his native town, and afterwards at the manse of Mearns, a rural parish in Renfrewshire, under the superintendence of Dr Maclatchie, the parochial clergyman.

When many clergymen were lecherous drunks, like Churchill and Laurence Sterne, and in addition ministers, were urging mobs to burn women for witchcraft, freethinkers were likely to regard religion with suspicion if not with actual hatred.

Madam Clement was visited by Fathom, who, after having complained, in the most insinuating manner that she had encouraged his wife to abandon her duty, told her a plausible story of his first acquaintance with Monimia, and his marriage at the Fleet, which, he said, he was ready to prove by the evidence of the clergyman who joined them, and that of Mrs.

American clergymen or, for the equally predecided, the average British journalist.

But only last year I saw with astonishment what purported to be a letter of a very distinguished and influential clergyman of Virginia, copied, with apparent approbation, into a St.