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local church

  • 1 The Local Church

    Religion: TLC

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > The Local Church

  • 2 церковь поместная

    Русско-английский глоссарий христианской лексики > церковь поместная

  • 3 поместный

    поместный собор (съезд автокефальной церкви или её отдельной части; собрание всех правящих архиереев поместной церкви, представителей белого духовенства, монашества и мирян для избрания патриарха, канонизации новых святых, а тж. для решения вопросов вероучения, культа, церк. управления, дисциплины и пр.) — local [regional, primatial, national] council

    Поместный собор Русской православной церкви — the Local [National] Council of the Russian Orthodox Church

    Русско-английский словарь религиозной лексики > поместный

  • 4 поместная церковь

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > поместная церковь

  • 5 parroquia

    f.
    1 parish church (iglesia).
    2 parish.
    3 parishioners, parish (fieles).
    4 clientele (clientela).
    * * *
    1 (area) parish
    2 (iglesia) parish church
    3 (feligreses) parishioners plural, congregation
    4 familiar (clientela) customers plural, clientele
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    SF
    1) (Rel) (=zona) parish; (=iglesia) parish church; (=feligreses) parishioners pl
    2) (=clientes) customers pl, clientele

    una tienda con mucha parroquia — a shop with a large clientele, a well-patronized shop

    * * *
    1) ( iglesia) parish church; ( área) parish; ( feligreses) parishioners (pl)
    2) ( clientela) customers (pl), clientele
    * * *
    = paroch, local church, parish [parishes, pl.].
    Ex. In Scotland the Reverend Kirkwood developed an elaborate scheme for 'founding and maintaining bibliothecks in every paroch throughout this kingdom'.
    Ex. This sources of information may be, for example, local churches, burial societies, labor unions, legal aid services and firms offering different forms of public transport.
    Ex. It has been said that the parish is the door to participation for the handicapped and that the pastor must keep the door always open.
    * * *
    1) ( iglesia) parish church; ( área) parish; ( feligreses) parishioners (pl)
    2) ( clientela) customers (pl), clientele
    * * *
    = paroch, local church, parish [parishes, pl.].

    Ex: In Scotland the Reverend Kirkwood developed an elaborate scheme for 'founding and maintaining bibliothecks in every paroch throughout this kingdom'.

    Ex: This sources of information may be, for example, local churches, burial societies, labor unions, legal aid services and firms offering different forms of public transport.
    Ex: It has been said that the parish is the door to participation for the handicapped and that the pastor must keep the door always open.

    * * *
    A
    1 (iglesia) parish church
    2 (área) parish
    3 (feligresía) parishioners (pl), congregation
    B
    1 (clientela) customers (pl), clientele
    2 (hinchas) fans (pl), supporters (pl)
    * * *

    parroquia sustantivo femenino ( iglesia) parish church;
    ( área) parish;
    ( feligreses) parishioners (pl)
    parroquia sustantivo femenino parish
    (iglesia) parish church
    ' parroquia' also found in these entries:
    English:
    parish
    - parishioner
    * * *
    1. [iglesia] parish church
    2. [jurisdicción] parish
    3. [fieles] parishioners, parish
    4. [clientela] clientele
    * * *
    f
    1 REL parish
    2 COM clientele, customers pl
    * * *
    1) : parish
    2) : parish church
    3) : customers pl, clientele
    * * *
    1. (iglesia) parish church
    2. (comunidad) parish [pl. parishes]

    Spanish-English dictionary > parroquia

  • 6 párroco

    m.
    parish priest, chaplain, parson.
    * * *
    1 parish priest
    * * *
    noun m.
    parson, parish priest
    * * *
    * * *
    masculino parish priest
    * * *
    = vicar, pastor, parson, parish priest.
    Ex. These figures of 'authority', the local postman, the vicar, the village postmistress and schoolmaster were fast disappearing from the rural scene.
    Ex. It has been said that the parish is the door to participation for the handicapped and that the pastor must keep the door always open.
    Ex. The parson, he said, now has to wait two weeks for a book being read by his clerk.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    ----
    * casa del párroco = parsonage house, parsonage.
    * * *
    masculino parish priest
    * * *
    = vicar, pastor, parson, parish priest.

    Ex: These figures of 'authority', the local postman, the vicar, the village postmistress and schoolmaster were fast disappearing from the rural scene.

    Ex: It has been said that the parish is the door to participation for the handicapped and that the pastor must keep the door always open.
    Ex: The parson, he said, now has to wait two weeks for a book being read by his clerk.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * casa del párroco = parsonage house, parsonage.

    * * *
    parish priest
    * * *

    párroco sustantivo masculino
    parish priest
    párroco sustantivo masculino parish priest
    ' párroco' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    ascendiente
    - vicario
    English:
    christen
    - rector
    - rectory
    - vicar
    - vicarage
    - parson
    - priest
    * * *
    parish priest
    * * *
    m parish priest
    * * *
    : parish priest
    * * *
    párroco n parish priest / vicar

    Spanish-English dictionary > párroco

  • 7 sacerdote

    m.
    priest, clergyman, churchman, clerk.
    * * *
    1 priest
    * * *
    (f. - sacerdotisa)
    noun
    priest / priestess
    * * *
    * * *
    masculino priest
    * * *
    = priest, divine, parson, parish priest, vicar.
    Ex. As early as 3000 B.C., the Sumerians kept records on clay tablets; many of those records applied to the management practices of the priests in Ur.
    Ex. There were popular religious works, mainly by later seventeenth century nonconformist divines, of which the most famous was of course John Bunyan.
    Ex. The parson, he said, now has to wait two weeks for a book being read by his clerk.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    Ex. These figures of 'authority', the local postman, the vicar, the village postmistress and schoolmaster were fast disappearing from the rural scene.
    * * *
    masculino priest
    * * *
    = priest, divine, parson, parish priest, vicar.

    Ex: As early as 3000 B.C., the Sumerians kept records on clay tablets; many of those records applied to the management practices of the priests in Ur.

    Ex: There were popular religious works, mainly by later seventeenth century nonconformist divines, of which the most famous was of course John Bunyan.
    Ex: The parson, he said, now has to wait two weeks for a book being read by his clerk.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    Ex: These figures of 'authority', the local postman, the vicar, the village postmistress and schoolmaster were fast disappearing from the rural scene.

    * * *
    priest
    Compuesto:
    worker priest
    * * *

    sacerdote sustantivo masculino
    priest
    sacerdote sustantivo masculino priest
    sumo sacerdote, high priest
    ' sacerdote' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    lama
    - ordenar
    - ordenarse
    - celebrar
    - condición
    - cura
    - misa
    - padre
    - paisano
    English:
    become
    - dog collar
    - father
    - high priest
    - marry
    - no
    - ordain
    - priest
    - guide
    * * *
    sacerdote, -isa
    nm,f
    [pagano] priest, f priestess
    nm
    [cristiano] priest;
    mujer sacerdote woman priest
    * * *
    m priest
    * * *
    : priest m, priestess f
    * * *
    sacerdote n priest

    Spanish-English dictionary > sacerdote

  • 8 abarrotado

    adj.
    crammed, packed, completely full, crowded.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: abarrotar.
    * * *
    1→ link=abarrotar abarrotar
    1 (cosas) packed (de, with), crammed (de, with); (personas) jam-packed (de, with), packed (de, with)
    * * *
    (f. - abarrotada)
    adj.
    * * *
    ADJ [sala, tren] packed, jam-packed

    estar abarrotado de — [+ personas] to be packed o jam-packed with; [+ objetos] to be crammed o jam-packed with

    * * *
    - da adjetivo crammed, packed

    abarrotado de algo< de gente> packed o crammed with something

    * * *
    = congested, packed to capacity, overcrowded, bursting at the seams, stuffed looking, choc-a-block, chock-full, cluttered, densely packed, packed, packed to the rafters.
    Ex. To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. Cooperative storage of materials on a regional or national basis promises to become the best way of coping with overcrowded libraries.
    Ex. The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex. As one librarian summarized, 'people are not into the stuffed looking, dingy, dust smelling type of libraries anymore... they expect atmospheres more like coffeehouses or nice bookstores'.
    Ex. The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex. Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex. They found him in his habitually cluttered office, buried beneath stacks of paperwork.
    Ex. The square was humble and nondescript, part of a maze of narrow streets and densely packed shops and houses.
    Ex. Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    ----
    * abarrotado (de) = teeming with, bursting with, jam-packed (with), filled to capacity.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo crammed, packed

    abarrotado de algo< de gente> packed o crammed with something

    * * *
    = congested, packed to capacity, overcrowded, bursting at the seams, stuffed looking, choc-a-block, chock-full, cluttered, densely packed, packed, packed to the rafters.

    Ex: To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.

    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex: Cooperative storage of materials on a regional or national basis promises to become the best way of coping with overcrowded libraries.
    Ex: The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex: As one librarian summarized, 'people are not into the stuffed looking, dingy, dust smelling type of libraries anymore... they expect atmospheres more like coffeehouses or nice bookstores'.
    Ex: The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex: Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex: They found him in his habitually cluttered office, buried beneath stacks of paperwork.
    Ex: The square was humble and nondescript, part of a maze of narrow streets and densely packed shops and houses.
    Ex: Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * abarrotado (de) = teeming with, bursting with, jam-packed (with), filled to capacity.

    * * *
    crammed, packed abarrotado DE algo packed o crammed WITH sth
    estanterías abarrotadas de adornos shelves crammed with ornaments
    el foyer estaba abarrotado de gente the foyer was packed with people
    * * *

    Del verbo abarrotar: ( conjugate abarrotar)

    abarrotado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    abarrotado    
    abarrotar
    abarrotado
    ◊ -da adjetivo

    crammed, packed;
    abarrotado de algo ‹ de gente› packed o crammed with sth
    abarrotar ( conjugate abarrotar) verbo transitivosala/teatro to pack
    abarrotado,-a adjetivo packed, crammed [de, with]: no pudimos entrar en el local, estaba abarrotado (de gente), we couldn't get into the place because it was jam-packed with people
    abarrotar verbo transitivo to pack, cram [de, with]: el público abarrotaba el teatro, the theatre was packed (with people)

    ' abarrotado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    abarrotada
    English:
    astir
    - chock-a-block
    - chock-full
    - overcrowded
    - swarm
    - cluttered
    - congested
    - crowded
    - over
    * * *
    abarrotado, -a adj
    1. [lleno] [teatro, autobús] packed (de with); [desván, baúl] crammed (de with)
    2. Ven
    estar abarrotado de trabajo to have a lot of work
    * * *
    I adj packed
    II partabarrotar
    * * *
    abarrotado, -da adj
    : packed, crammed

    Spanish-English dictionary > abarrotado

  • 9 Kirchweih

    * * *
    Kịrch|weih [-vai]
    f -, -en
    fair, kermis (US)
    * * *
    Kirch·weih
    <-, -en>
    f
    Kirch·wei·he
    <-, -n>
    f (ländlicher Jahrmarkt) [country] fair
    * * *
    die; Kirch, Kirchen fair
    * * *
    Kirchweih f; -, -en annual fair (commemorating the consecration of the local church)
    * * *
    die; Kirch, Kirchen fair

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Kirchweih

  • 10 a tope

    adv.
    as much as possible.
    * * *
    argot (al límite) flat out 2 (lleno) jam-packed, chock-a-block 3 (estupendo) terrific 4 (música) full blast
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, in the fast lane, fast lane, choc-a-block, chock-full, in full swing, in full gear, packed to the rafters
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The article 'A charmed brew: document delivery and collection in the fast lane' examines the implications of the proliferation of document delivery services and types of access available for librarians.
    Ex. The article is entitled 'The news librarians: fast lane information professionals' = El artículo se titula "Los documentalistas de los medios de comunicación: profesionales de la información a toda pastilla".
    Ex. The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex. Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex. And when the New Year celebrations were in full swing at the moment Britain entered the Community, how many people remember raising their glasses to Europe?.
    Ex. Christmas is merely three weeks away, even if the commercialized aspect of the holidays have been in full gear for over two weeks now.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, in the fast lane, fast lane, choc-a-block, chock-full, in full swing, in full gear, packed to the rafters

    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.

    Ex: The article 'A charmed brew: document delivery and collection in the fast lane' examines the implications of the proliferation of document delivery services and types of access available for librarians.
    Ex: The article is entitled 'The news librarians: fast lane information professionals' = El artículo se titula "Los documentalistas de los medios de comunicación: profesionales de la información a toda pastilla".
    Ex: The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex: Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex: And when the New Year celebrations were in full swing at the moment Britain entered the Community, how many people remember raising their glasses to Europe?.
    Ex: Christmas is merely three weeks away, even if the commercialized aspect of the holidays have been in full gear for over two weeks now.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > a tope

  • 11 de bote en bote

    jam-packed
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, choc-a-block, chock-full, densely packed, packed, packed to the rafters
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex. Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex. The square was humble and nondescript, part of a maze of narrow streets and densely packed shops and houses.
    Ex. Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, choc-a-block, chock-full, densely packed, packed, packed to the rafters

    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.

    Ex: The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex: Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex: The square was humble and nondescript, part of a maze of narrow streets and densely packed shops and houses.
    Ex: Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > de bote en bote

  • 12 dilecto

    adj.
    1 loved beloved.
    2 dear, beloved, dearly beloved.
    * * *
    1 beloved, dearly beloved
    * * *
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *

    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    * * *
    dilecto -ta
    ( frml); ‹amigo/compañero› dear, good ( before n)
    hijo dilecto de la ciudad de Mendoza ( frml); much-loved o well-loved o beloved son of the city of Mendoza ( frml)
    * * *
    dilecto, -a adj
    Formal beloved, much-loved;
    mi dilecto colega my dear colleague

    Spanish-English dictionary > dilecto

  • 13 hasta los topes

    (v.) = packed to capacity, bursting at the seams, choc-a-block, chock-full, overloaded, packed to the rafters
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex. The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex. Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex. He dismissed the image of overloaded libraries collapsing under the weight of a surfeit of paper as 'mythology'.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, bursting at the seams, choc-a-block, chock-full, overloaded, packed to the rafters

    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.

    Ex: The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex: The library was choc-a-block with celebrities and children as they swarmed to see the signing of the new Harry Potter book by its author.
    Ex: Herbal cancer remedy is chock-full of drugs.
    Ex: He dismissed the image of overloaded libraries collapsing under the weight of a surfeit of paper as 'mythology'.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > hasta los topes

  • 14 lleno a reventar

    (v.) = bursting, bursting at the seams, packed to capacity, packed to the rafters
    Ex. The bursting linen cupboard is characteristic of the late 19th century, since people used their linen to decorate interiors.
    Ex. The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = bursting, bursting at the seams, packed to capacity, packed to the rafters

    Ex: The bursting linen cupboard is characteristic of the late 19th century, since people used their linen to decorate interiors.

    Ex: The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > lleno a reventar

  • 15 lleno a tope

    (v.) = packed to capacity, packed to the rafters
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, packed to the rafters

    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.

    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > lleno a tope

  • 16 lleno al máximo

    (v.) = packed to capacity, packed to the rafters
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, packed to the rafters

    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.

    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > lleno al máximo

  • 17 lleno hasta la bandera

    (v.) = packed to capacity, packed to the rafters
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = packed to capacity, packed to the rafters

    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.

    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > lleno hasta la bandera

  • 18 lleno hasta los topes

    (v.) = bursting, bursting at the seams, packed to capacity, packed to the rafters
    Ex. The bursting linen cupboard is characteristic of the late 19th century, since people used their linen to decorate interiors.
    Ex. The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (v.) = bursting, bursting at the seams, packed to capacity, packed to the rafters

    Ex: The bursting linen cupboard is characteristic of the late 19th century, since people used their linen to decorate interiors.

    Ex: The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
    Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.
    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > lleno hasta los topes

  • 19 muy amado

    adj.
    much-loved, beloved, dearly beloved, well-beloved.
    * * *
    (adj.) = much-loved
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (adj.) = much-loved

    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > muy amado

  • 20 muy querido

    adj.
    dear, well-loved, well-liked.
    * * *
    (adj.) = much-loved
    Ex. The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.
    * * *
    (adj.) = much-loved

    Ex: The local church was packed to the rafters for the funeral of a much-loved parish priest who died last month aged 69.

    Spanish-English dictionary > muy querido

См. также в других словарях:

  • Local church — For other uses, see Local church (disambiguation). A local church is a Christian religious organization that meets in a particular location. Many are formally organized, with constitutions and by laws, maintain offices, are served by pastors or… …   Wikipedia

  • Local Church —    The Local Church is an indigenous nondenomi national Chinese Protestant body, also known as the Little Flock and the Assembly Hall Churches. The movement was founded in the late 1920s in Shanghai by Watchman Nee (1903 72). Raised a Methodist,… …   Encyclopedia of Protestantism

  • local church —    This term (from the Latin locus, meaning place ) refers to the presence of the universal Church in a particular place; the local church is properly identified as a diocese or eparchy, but it is popularly used to refer to as a parish.    See… …   Glossary of theological terms

  • Local Church controversies — Non Theological Controversies Naming Issues Internally, the Local Church movement generally refers to itself as The Lord s Recovery . Some critics claim that, as Watchman Nee and Witness Lee never claimed the name Local Church for the movement,… …   Wikipedia

  • Local Church, the — ▪ international religious group       international Evangelical Christian group founded in China in the 1930s and based on the belief that a city or town should have only one church.       The Local Church grew out of the ministry of Watchman Nee …   Universalium

  • Local church (disambiguation) — A local church is a Christian congregation of members and clergy.Local church may also refer to:* Local churches (affiliation), a group affiliated with Witness Lee and the Living Stream Ministry * Parish, a local church united with other parishes …   Wikipedia

  • Local Church (and ‘shouters’) — Protestant sect The ‘Local Church’, which is sometimes called by its adherents ‘churches in the Lord’s recovery’, is a movement partially derived from ideas of Watchman Nee (Ni Tuoshen, 1903–72) and his movement, called by some the Little Flock.… …   Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture

  • The Local Church — is one of several groups which arose out of the Plymouth Brethren tradition …   Wikipedia

  • Church of God in Christ — Classification Protestant Orientation Pentecostal Polity Episcopal Leader Charles E. Blake Geographical areas Worldwide Founder Charles Harrison Mason Origin …   Wikipedia

  • Church planting — is a process that results in a new (local) Christian church being established. It should be distinguished from church development, where a new service, new worship centre or fresh expression is created that is integrated into an already… …   Wikipedia

  • Church Property —     Property Ecclesiastical     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Property Ecclesiastical     Abstract Right of Ownership     That the Church has the right to acquire and possess temporal goods is a proposition which may now probably be considered an… …   Catholic encyclopedia

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