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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
ecclesiastic
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A number of distinguished commentators, most of them ecclesiastics, were assembled to evaluate the programmes and their implications.
▪ Among themselves, ecclesiastics have become eminently sophisticated and erudite.
▪ High ecclesiastics were men of authority as well as of sanctity.
▪ In consequence, a gulf has opened between ecclesiastics and their congregations.
▪ Indications that Cnut had difficulties with some Fenland ecclesiastics can also be considered in this context.
▪ Not impossibly there was a resistance movement in the Fens, as later under William the Conqueror, and ecclesiastics became involved.
▪ Personal ambition was doubtless another factor which tended to enmesh ecclesiastics in politics.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ecclesiastic

Ecclesiastic \Ec*cle`si*as"tic\ (?; 277), a. [L. ecclesiasticus, Gr. ?, fr. ? an assembly of citizens called out by the crier; also, the church, fr. ? called out, fr. ? to call out; 'ek out + ? to call. See Ex-, and Hale, v. t., Haul.] Of or pertaining to the church. See Ecclesiastical. ``Ecclesiastic government.''
--Swift.

Ecclesiastic

Ecclesiastic \Ec*cle`si*as"tic\, n. A person in holy orders, or consecrated to the service of the church and the ministry of religion; a clergyman; a priest.

From a humble ecclesiastic, he was subsequently preferred to the highest dignities of the church.
--Prescott.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
ecclesiastic

late 15c., from Middle French ecclésiastique and directly from Late Latin ecclesiasticus, from Greek ekklesiastikos "of the (ancient Athenian) assembly," in late Greek, "of the church," from ekklesiastes "speaker in an assembly or church, preacher," from ekkalein "to call out," from ek "out" (see ex-) + kalein "to call" (see claim (v.)). As a noun, "one holding an office in the Christian ministry," 1650s; it also was used as a noun in Late Latin.

Wiktionary
ecclesiastic

a. Of or pertaining to the church; ecclesiastical. n. One who adheres to a church-based philosophy.

WordNet
ecclesiastic

adj. of or associated with a church (especially a Christian Church); "ecclesiastic history" [syn: ecclesiastical]

ecclesiastic

n. a clergyman or other person in religious orders [syn: cleric, churchman, divine]

Usage examples of "ecclesiastic".

He is the secular ecclesiastic who resigned the said archdeaconry to the governor, as I have said above, for the reasons mentioned.

About the same time, one John Stacey, an ecclesiastic, much connected with the duke as well as with Burdet, was exposed to a like iniquitous and barbarous prosecution.

San Francisco Solano, the first ecclesiastic who rose to much note as a missionary, and who made his celebrated journey through the Chaco in 1588-89 from Peru to Paraguay, was a Franciscan.

I was compelled by poverty to become a member of a musical band, in which I could expect neither esteem nor consideration, and I was well aware that I should be the laughing-stock of the persons who had known me as a doctor in divinity, as an ecclesiastic, and as an officer in the army, and had welcomed me in the highest society.

As as ecclesiastic he could not court her openly, but the hussy made no mystery whatever of his visits.

In an age when the ecclesiastics had scandalously degenerated from the model of apostolic purity, the most worthless and corrupt were always the most eager to frequent, and disturb, the episcopal assemblies.

Clement promised himself not a little amusement from the curiously sedate drollery of the venerable Deacon, who, it was plain from his conversation, had cultivated a literary taste which would make him a more agreeable companion than the common ecclesiastics of his grade in country villages.

Flemish ecclesiastic, who had been guilty of the offence of doubting the evection, or bodily transport through the air, of witches and wizards.

The ecclesiastics, to whom we are indebted for this vague description of the public calamities, embraced the opportunity of exhorting the Christians to repent of the sins which had provoked the Divine Justice, and to renounce the perishable goods of a wretched and deceitful world.

I received much applause, and every one predicted that I would certainly become the first preacher of our century, as no young ecclesiastic of fifteen had ever been known to preach as well as I had done.

Soon afterwards a spy informed the bargello that, at the very moment the arrest was executed, he had seen a young abbe run away very rapidly and take refuge in this palace, and the suspicion immediately arose that it might be the missing young lady in the disguise of an ecclesiastic.

We had a light supper, and spent a delightful night, taking good care to part by day-break, so as not to be caught in the same bed by the worthy ecclesiastic.

For having undone all the work of Cardinal Richelieu, for having changed the old enmity between France and Austria into friendship, for delivering Italy from the horrors of war which befell her whenever these countries had a bone to pick, although he was the first cardinal made by a pope who had had plenty of opportunities for discovering his character, merely because, on being asked, he had given it as his opinion that the Prince de Soubise was not a fit person to command the French armies, this great ecclesiastic was driven into exile.

In the meanwhile the wretched ecclesiastic had huddled on his clothes.

An hour before she sighed her last, she bade me the last farewell in the presence of the venerable ecclesiastic who had confessed her at midnight.