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Word Meanings - CANDIDATING - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The taking of the position of a candidate; specifically, the preaching of a clergyman with a view to settlement.

Related words: (words related to CANDIDATING)

  • TAKING
    1. Apt to take; alluring; attracting. Subtile in making his temptations most taking. Fuller. 2. Infectious; contageous. Beau. & Fl. -- Tak"ing*ly, adv. -- Tak"ing*ness, n.
  • SPECIFICALLY
    In a specific manner.
  • SETTLEMENT
    A disposition of property for the benefit of some person or persons, usually through the medium of trustees, and for the benefit of a wife, children, or other relatives; jointure granted to a wife, or the act of granting it. 2. That which settles,
  • CANDIDATESHIP
    Candidacy.
  • TAKE
    Taken. Chaucer.
  • TAKE-OFF
    An imitation, especially in the way of caricature.
  • CLERGYMAN
    An ordained minister; a man regularly authorized to peach the gospel, and administer its ordinances; in England usually restricted to a minister of the Established Church.
  • PREACH
    cry in public, to proclaim; prae before + dicare to make known, dicere to say; or perhaps from LL. praedictare. See 1. To proclaim or publish tidings; specifically, to proclaim the gospel; to discourse publicly on a religious subject, or from
  • PREACHMENT
    A religious harangue; a sermon; -- used derogatively. Shak.
  • TAKE-IN
    Imposition; fraud.
  • PREACHIFY
    To discourse in the manner of a preacher. Thackeray.
  • PREACHERSHIP
    The office of a preacher. "The preachership of the Rolls." Macaulay.
  • PREACHER
    1. One who preaches; one who discourses publicly on religious subjects. How shall they hear without a preacher Rom. x. 14. 2. One who inculcates anything with earnestness. No preacher is listened to but Time. Swift. Preacher bird , a toucan.
  • POSITION
    A method of solving a problem by one or two suppositions; -- called also the rule of trial and error. Angle of position , the angle which any line makes with another fixed line, specifically with a circle of declination. -- Double position ,
  • POSITIONAL
    Of or pertaining to position. Ascribing unto plants positional operations. Sir T. Browne.
  • TAKE-UP
    That which takes up or tightens; specifically, a device in a sewing machine for drawing up the slack thread as the needle rises, in completing a stitch.
  • PREACHMAN
    A preacher; -- so called in contempt. Howell.
  • TAKING-OFF
    Removal; murder. See To take off , under Take, v. t. The deep damnation of his taking-off. Shak.
  • TAKEN
    p. p. of Take.
  • TAKER
    One who takes or receives; one who catches or apprehended.
  • OUTPREACH
    To surpass in preaching. And for a villain's quick conversion A pillory can outpreach a parson. Trumbull.
  • UNMISTAKABLE
    Incapable of being mistaken or misunderstood; clear; plain; obvious; evident. -- Un`mis*tak"a*bly, adv.
  • LEAVE-TAKING
    Taking of leave; parting compliments. Shak.
  • MISTAKING
    An error; a mistake. Shak.
  • APPOSITION
    The state of two nouns or pronouns, put in the same case, without a connecting word between them; as, I admire Cicero, the orator. Here, the second noun explains or characterizes the first. Growth by apposition , a mode of growth characteristic
  • MISTAKINGLY
    Erroneously.
  • OPPOSITIONIST
    One who belongs to the opposition party. Praed.
  • OUTTAKE
    Except. R. of Brunne.
  • EXPOSITION
    1. The act of exposing or laying open; a setting out or displaying to public view. 2. The act of expounding or of laying open the sense or meaning of an author, or a passage; explanation; interpretation; the sense put upon a passage; a law, or
  • DECOMPOSITION
    1. The act or process of resolving the constituent parts of a compound body or substance into its elementary parts; separation into constituent part; analysis; the decay or dissolution consequent on the removal or alteration of some of
  • STAKTOMETER
    A drop measurer; a glass tube tapering to a small orifice at the point, and having a bulb in the middle, used for finding the number of drops in equal quantities of different liquids. See Pipette. Sir D. Brewster.
  • SIDE-TAKING
    A taking sides, as with a party, sect, or faction. Bp. Hall.
  • SEPOSITION
    The act of setting aside, or of giving up. Jer. Taylor.
  • CIRCUMPOSITION
    The act of placing in a circle, or round about, or the state of being so placed. Evelyn.
  • ANTEPOSITION
    The placing of a before another, which, by ordinary rules, ought to follow it.

 

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