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parishioner    音标拼音: [pɚ'ɪʃənɚ]


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  • meaning - Parishioner vs. congregant - English Language Usage . . .
    Parishioner and congregant refer to members of a particular local faith community The requirements for membership, of course, vary considerably, but for the most part, simply attending services at a church does not make one a parishioner or congregant of that church any more than visiting a country makes one a citizen of it
  • How would I address people who attend church with me?
    To take up the suggestion that Hot Licks makes in a comment above, parishioner might be an appropriate term for you to use Here is the entry for parishioner in Merriam-Webster's Eleventh Collegiate Dictionary (2003): parishioner n (15c) : a member or inhabitant of a parish and here is the same dictionary's entry for parish: parish n (14c) 1 a (1) : the ecclesiastical unit of area committed to
  • A word for a group of people in a church - English Language Usage . . .
    A *parishioner, as Collins says, is somone who lives in the parish They may not go to church at all, much less for a specific Mass
  • Queueing or Queuing - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Which spelling is better, queueing or queuing? Both words seem to mean the same, but there are two different spellings My context is: Queueing Latency versus Queuing Latency If both spelling
  • pride vs. proudness - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Until yesterday I did not even know that the noun proudness exists I always thought pride was the only possible noun for the adjective proud Is there actually a difference between the two nouns (
  • Whats the difference between denizen, resident, inhabitant?
    Here is the Webster's Dictionary of Synonyms (1942) entry for the three words (plus citizen): Inhabitant, denizen, resident, citizen are here compared as meaning one whose home or dwelling place is in a definite location Of these terms inhabitant applies regularly in nonfigurative use to animals as well as persons, and only denizen applies also to plants and sometimes even to words
  • Origin of doomscrolling - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    When and where did this extraordinarily evocative word doomscrolling evolve? It seems to mean quot;The compulsive act of scrolling through endless streams of bad news, often late at night, knowing
  • I noticed vs I have noticed [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
    Is there a difference between I noticed and I have noticed? What is the correct use of each of these? Thanks
  • Is bolded a word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I'd say in the context of computer editing, bold is certainly used as a verb (e g bold that paragraph, I bolded the important points), beyond that it depends on your criteria for what makes a word Wikitionary certainly cites this use as a word, and I trust them more than the OED for defintions of "new" words or meanings of words Verb bold (third-person singular simple present bolds, present
  • Cheat or cheater? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Even if a parishioner was a cantankerous bingo cheat who ruined midnight Mass by accidentally setting the Christmas tree on fire, the Catholic community must honor his or her wish to be buried in a Catholic cemetery





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