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View synonyms for cleric

cleric

[ kler-ik ]

noun

  1. a member of the clergy.
  2. a member of a clerical party.
  3. clerics, (used with a plural verb) half-sized or small-sized reading glasses worn on the nose, usually rimless or with a thin metal frame.


adjective

  1. pertaining to the clergy; clerical.

cleric

/ ˈklɛrɪk /

noun

  1. a member of the clergy


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Word History and Origins

Origin of cleric1

1615–25; < Late Latin clēricus priest < Greek klērikós, equivalent to klêr ( os ) lot, allotment + -ikos -ic

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Word History and Origins

Origin of cleric1

C17: from Church Latin clēricus priest, clerk

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Example Sentences

Three years ago, Republican Guard soldiers came into the hills and killed a cleric accused of hosting Jundullah fighters.

But he seemed on first encounter to be very gray, more a forgettable clerk than a firebrand cleric.

In 1483 the princes were publicly declared illegitimate by a cleric.

And the third was Mullah Adahdad, 45, an unarmed cleric who was attacked with a grenade and gunned down by several soldiers.

Coming from the Jordanian cleric, that condemnation is especially powerful.

His friends now wondered at the cleric and very official-looking nature of his position.

A cleric declares that he was at heart not a bad child but had been harmed by bad examples.

They send a messenger to the cleric, that water be brought to them in the field.

In a passion, he cursed the cleric, crying: 'As the minister of the devil, thou canst only guide to hell!

"Paint the soul, never mind the legs and arms," recommended the cleric in Fra Lippo Lippi.

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