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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
  • 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
  • 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
  • pronouns - Can you write . . . mes (the possessive)? - English . . .
    " The person behind me's breathing " is called a " group genitive " Grammarian Richard Nordquist states in his introduction to the topic on ThoughtCo: In English grammar, the group genitive is a possessive construction (such as "the man next door's cat") in which the clitic appears at the end of a noun phrase whose final word is not its head or not its only head Also called a group
  • 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
  • prepositions - Before date versus by date - English Language . . .
    Is it incorrect to say "Please do this before Tuesday"? Is there a difference between that and "Please do this by Tuesday"?
  • What is the origin of the phrase Ill take a raincheck?
    The literal sense of rain check, which is an Americanism, is first found in the 1880s in reference to a baseball game The practice of giving a rain check to a ticketholder was formalized in 1890 in the constitution of the National League In other words, if it rained (something the purchaser had no influence over) and the game was postponed, the ticket holder could come back for another game





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