curate - определение. Что такое curate
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Что (кто) такое curate - определение

RELIGIOUS OCCUPATION
Curacy; Curé; Curates; Curatus; Curacies; Assistant curate; Curate-in-Charge; Assistant Curate; Initial Ministerial Education
  • Curé d'Ars}}
Найдено результатов: 30
curate         
(curated)
1.
A curate is a clergyman in the Anglican Church who helps the priest.
N-COUNT
2.
If an exhibition is curated by someone, they organize it.
The Hayward exhibition has been curated by the artist Bernard Luthi.
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed
curate         
curate1 ['kj??r?t]
¦ noun (also assistant curate) a member of the clergy engaged as assistant to a parish priest.
?archaic a minister with pastoral responsibility.
Phrases
curate's egg Brit. something that is partly good and partly bad. [from a cartoon in Punch (1895) depicting a meek curate who, given a stale egg when dining with the bishop, assures his host that 'parts of it are excellent'.]
Derivatives
curacy noun (plural curacies).
Origin
ME: from med. L. curatus, from L. cura 'care'.
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curate2 [kj?(?)'re?t]
¦ verb select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition).
Derivatives
curation noun
Origin
C19: back-form. from curator.
Curate         
·noun One who has the cure of souls; originally, any clergyman, but now usually limited to one who assists a rector or vicar.
Curate         
A curate (, sometimes ) is a person who is invested with the care or cure (cura) of souls of a parish. In this sense, "curate" means a parish priest; but in English-speaking countries the term curate is commonly used to describe clergy who are assistants to the parish priest.
Curacy         
·noun The office or employment of a curate.
Curacies         
·pl of Curacy.
Perpetual curate         
  • Charles Dodgson]], perpetual curate of [[All Saints' Church, Daresbury]] in Cheshire; and father of C. L. Dodgson, otherwise known as [[Lewis Carroll]]. All Saints had been created as a perpetual curacy in 1536 out of a chapel-of-ease of nearby [[Norton Priory]].
  • [[Haworth Parsonage]] built in 1774 as the parsonage house for the ancient chapelry of [[Haworth]] in the parish of [[Bradford]], established as a perpetual curacy in 1820, at the appointment of [[Patrick Brontë]]
  • [[Cheltenham Minster, St Mary's]] an ancient parish church appropriated with a vicarage by [[Cirencester Abbey]] and, because unbeneficed at the dissolution in 1539, then continuing with a perpetual curacy  until reunited with its rectory in 1863
CLASS OF RESIDENT PARISH PRIEST OR INCUMBENT CURATE WITHIN THE UNITED CHURCH OF ENGLAND AND IRELAND.
Perpetual curacy; Perpetual Curate
Perpetual curate was a class of resident parish priest or incumbent curate within the United Church of England and Ireland (name of the combined Anglican churches of England and Ireland from 1800 to 1871). The term is found in common use mainly during the first half of the 19th century.
A Curate in Bohemia         
1972 TELEVISION FILM DIRECTED BY ALAN BURKE
A Curate in Bohemia is a 1972 Australian TV play based on a 1913 novel by Norman Lindsay. It was one of a series of adaptations of Lindsay works on the ABC in 1972.
curate-in-charge         
PRIEST IN CHARGE OF A PARISH WHO IS NOT ITS INCUMBENT
Bishop's curate; Ministre Desservant; Priest-in-charge; Priest in Charge; Priest-in-Charge; Priest-In-Charge; Priest In Charge; Curate-in-charge
¦ noun another term for priest-in-charge.
The Spanish Curate         
PLAY WRITTEN BY JOHN FLETCHER
The Spanish Curate is a late Jacobean era stage play, a comedy written by John Fletcher and Philip Massinger. It premiered on the stage in 1622, and was first published in 1647.

Википедия

Curate

A curate () is a person who is invested with the care or cure (cura) of souls of a parish. In this sense, curate means a parish priest; but in English-speaking countries the term curate is commonly used to describe clergy who are assistants to the parish priest. The duties or office of a curate are called a curacy.