rector

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Synonyms for rector

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

Synonyms for rector

a person authorized to conduct religious worship

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Besides rooting science in factical life, Heidegger's rectorial address reiterates its author's long-standing belief that the university must be the site on which such a science will arise:
The best estimate is that 3,500,000 acres of former rectorial land in England and Wales are now covered with homes, businesses, farms and gardens.
The second chapter reads Heidegger's "Rectorial Address" (1933) as "a condensed and concentrated expression of Heidegger's most enduring philosophical themes" (p.
The land includes a field called Clanacre, which is accepted as rectorial property, making the Wallbanks lay impropriators of the parish of Aston Cantlow and Wilmcote with Billesley.
The small print in the deeds to the home says it is a "rectorial property" which
The Reverend Gareth Coombes, vicar in the rectorial benefice of Eglwysilan and Caerphilly, said: "We are so pleased that Caerphilly Funeral Services has sponsored St Catherine's Food Co-op by supplying attractive, reusable and robust bags for our customers.
Their farm includes a field classified as rectorial property, making them liable for the church's upkeep.
In inheriting a field called Clanacre from Mrs Wallbank's father, they also inherited his liability as a 'lay rector' of the 12th century church of St John the Baptist at Aston Cantlow, Warwickshire, because the field was rectorial property.
Community, loyalty, sacrifice, common destiny (Geschick--and later deutsches Schicksal), conflict and death, condemnation of security, criticism of das Man and of the banality of the masses, historical commitment, indictment of universal norms and concepts (for example, of man), rejection of internationalism, and radical indictment of modernism are important themes spread across Heidegger's writings from his lectures in the 1920s to Sein und Zeit and his rectorial speech and period.
The pair own Glebe Farm, Aston Cantlow, Warwickshire, which includes a field called Clanacre, which is rectorial property and makes the Wallbanks ``lay rectors'' of the parish.
The Rev Ben Rabjohns will be licensed Team Vicar in the Rectorial Benefice of Aberavon on Monday, by the Archbishop of Wales, Dr Barry Morgan.
Mr Wallbank inherited a 176-acre Warwickshire farm from his father which includes a field called Clanacre which is classified by Church Law as 'rectorial property'.
Echoing Sheehan's observations earlier on, Theodore Kisiel suggests that Introduction "is a transitional text, on the way from Heidegger's rectorial address to his Beitrdge zur Philosophie (1936-38)" (p.