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magisterial
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
magisterial
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
Magisterial permission is necessary for any public gathering.
▪ Finkelstein wrote a magisterial essay on the subject.
▪ In a magisterial tone he announced the Chaplain's arrival.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A crest of wavy, blond hair was loosely rooted on a magisterial forehead.
▪ And, as gifted mimic, Boswell could roll out the magisterial Johnsonian cadences.
▪ Cognitio was an official procedure, and a judgment given in it was based on magisterial authority.
▪ Curriculum managers reading this discussion may rightly feel that this magisterial balance has rather little to offer to their own pressing concerns.
▪ In the case of Pope it is the Essay on Man on which he exercises his gift for the magisterial put-down.
▪ The youth carries the symbols of magisterial office.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Magisterial

Magisterial \Mag`is*te"ri*al\, a. [L. magisterius magisterial. See Master.]

  1. Of or pertaining to a master or magistrate, or one in authority; having the manner of a magister; official; commanding; authoritative. Hence: Overbearing; dictatorial; dogmatic.

    When magisterial duties from his home Her father called.
    --Glover.

    We are not magisterial in opinions, nor, dictator-like, obtrude our notions on any man.
    --Sir T. Browne.

    Pretenses go a great way with men that take fair words and magisterial looks for current payment.
    --L'Estrange.

  2. (Alchem. & Old Chem.) Pertaining to, produced by, or of the nature of, magistery. See Magistery, 2.

    Syn: Authoritative; stately; august; pompous; dignified; lofty; commanding; imperious; lordly; proud; haughty; domineering; despotic; dogmatical; arrogant.

    Usage: Magisterial, Dogmatical, Arrogant. One who is magisterial assumes the air of a master toward his pupils; one who is dogmatical lays down his positions in a tone of authority or dictation; one who is arrogant insults others by an undue assumption of superiority. Those who have long been teachers sometimes acquire, unconsciously, a manner which borders too much on the magisterial, and may be unjustly construed as dogmatical, or even arrogant.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
magisterial

1630s, from Medieval Latin magisterialis "of or pertaining to the office of magistrate, director, or teacher," from Late Latin magisterius "having authority of a magistrate," from magister "chief, director" (see master (n.)). Related: Magisterially.

Wiktionary
magisterial

a. 1 Befitting the status or skill of a magister or master; authoritative, masterly. 2 Of or pertaining to a master or magistrate, or one in authority. 3 Pertaining to, produced by, or of the nature of, magistery.

WordNet
magisterial
  1. adj. of or relating to a magistrate; "official magisterial functions"

  2. offensively self-assured or given to exercising usually unwarranted power; "an autocratic person"; "autocratic behavior"; "a bossy way of ordering others around"; "a rather aggressive and dominating character"; "managed the employees in an aloof magisterial way"; "a swaggering peremptory manner" [syn: autocratic, bossy, dominating, high-and-mighty, peremptory]

  3. used of a person's appearance or behavior; befitting an eminent person; "his distinguished bearing"; "the monarch's imposing presence"; "she reigned in magisterial beauty" [syn: distinguished, imposing]

Usage examples of "magisterial".

Council chamber opened, and the rest of the Council began to arrive, austere and magisterial in their grey Council robes: Breu-lin, Meron, Volpiril, Perizel, Lorins, Arance, Ganaret, Nagid, Vilmos, Da-gan, Isas, Harith.

His honorable and mystic magisterial elf self Judge Cooble Pilk presiding.

Neither priestcraft, nor magisterial powers, however, cramped the progress of improving reason, or baffled the genius of enquiring man.

At this, the ruched silk background was replaced by a group of three arched windows opening on to the magisterial glare of the Kefahuchi Tract.

As usual, he has discovered that Magisterial might doth prevail over both Bursarial budgets and Presidential privileges.

Once again, Margarite was struck by the almost magisterial silence of the convent.

As Paul Boyer points out in his magisterial book on this subject, the strength of millenarian feelings among a minority of Americans means that they have also had an effect on wider culture, feeding into Hollywood films such as the Omen series, science fiction novels and pop music.

The windows were large and domineering with intricate plasterwork giving a magisterial theme to the place.

Let us suppose our ancient monarchy abolished, our independent hierarchy reduced to a stipendiary sect, the gentlemen of England deprived of their magisterial functions, and metropolitan prefects and sub-prefects established in the counties and principal towns, commanding a vigorous and vigilant police, and backed by an army under the immediate orders of a single House of Parliament.

CHAPTER XXXVII--THE DUEL Heretofore all my magisterial undertakings and concerns had thriven in a very satisfactory manner.

Despite her suffering, poor Maude, recognizing the shameless display she had just made of herself, clapped her left palm over the intimate hollow to hide it from him, and was promptly rewarded with another magisterial stroke of the rod, this one switching fiercely across the broadest, most resilient curves of both her bottomcheeks.

Council chamber opened, and the rest of the Council began to arrive, austere and magisterial in their grey Council robes: Breu-lin, Meron, Volpiril, Perizel, Lorins, Arance, Ganaret, Nagid, Vilmos, Da-gan, Isas, Harith.

Council chamber opened, and the rest of the Council began to arrive, austere and magisterial in their grey Council robes: Breulin, Meron, Volpiril, Perizel, Lorins, Arance, Ganaret, Nagid, Vilmos, Dagan, Isas, Harith.

Thomas Bakewell, yeoman, had been arrested on suspicion of the crime of Arson and lodged in jail, awaiting the magisterial pleasure of Sir Miles Papworth.

Senatus Consultum Ultimum remains in effect, you are disbarred from all meetings and all magisterial business.