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Definitions

archdeacon

[ahrch-dee-kuhn] / ˈɑrtʃˈdi kən /


Example Sentences

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By the age of 24, Laval was ordained a priest; he was quickly named an archdeacon and eventually a bishop.

From Salon • Feb. 25, 2023

“In a situation like this, you feel you’re powerless,” said Abiade Lozama, an Anglican archdeacon based in the south of the country, which was hard hit by the quake.

From Seattle Times • Aug. 17, 2021

He suggested to his archdeacon that he undertake a "brain dump" of information he had acquired over the preceding two decades.

From BBC • Jul. 16, 2021

By contrast, Dr. Grantly, the old archdeacon, has limited administrative power but considerable real power, because it is rooted in a set of wide, deeply entrenched clan-family ties.

From The New Yorker • Apr. 27, 2015

Denunciatio was the official act of the public officer, such as the testis synodalis or archdeacon, who summoned the court to take action against offenders coming within his official knowledge.

From A History of The Inquisition of The Middle Ages; volume I by Lea, Henry Charles