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1 officiate
verb (to do the duty or service of an office or official position: The new clergyman officiated at the wedding.) oficiartr[ə'fɪʃɪeɪt]1 (gen) ejercer2 SMALLRELIGION/SMALL oficiar1) : arbitrar (en deportes)2)to officiate at : oficiar, celebrarofficiate vt: arbitrarv.• oficiar v.ə'fɪʃieɪtto officiate AT something — \<\<at mass/at a wedding\>\> oficiar (en) or celebrar algo
[ǝ'fɪʃɪeɪt]VI oficiarto officiate at a marriage — oficiar un enlace or una boda
* * *[ə'fɪʃieɪt]to officiate AT something — \<\<at mass/at a wedding\>\> oficiar (en) or celebrar algo
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2 officiate
v.1 ejercer un cargo, regentar.2 oficiar.3 celebrar, oficiar.vi.celebrar (el oficio) (religión) ( at en) (pt & pp officiated) -
3 officiate as
v.fungir como, ejercer la funciones de, oficiar de. -
4 officiate at
v.celebrar en, oficiar en. -
5 officiate Mass
v.oficiar la Misa. -
6 officially
ə'fiʃəli1) ((negative unofficially) as an official: He attended the ceremony officially.) oficialmente2) (formally: The new library was officially opened yesterday.) oficialmente3) (according to what is announced publicly (though not necessarily true in fact): Officially he is on holiday - actually he is working on a new book.) oficialmente•- officious
- officiously
- officiousness
- office-bearer
- through the kind offices of
- through the offices of
officially adv oficialmentetr[ə'fɪʃəlɪ]1 oficialmenteadv.• oficialmente adv.ə'fɪʃəliadverb oficialmente[ǝ'fɪʃǝlɪ]ADV oficialmente* * *[ə'fɪʃəli]adverb oficialmente -
7 celebrar
celebrar ( conjugate celebrar) verbo transitivo 1 2 (frml) ( alegrarse) to be delighted at, be very pleased at; 3 ‹ partido› to play ‹ boda› to perform verbo intransitivo [ sacerdote] to say o celebrate mass
celebrar verbo transitivo
1 (festejar) to celebrate
2 (una reunión, un juicio, unas elecciones) to hold (una misa) to say (una boda) to perform
3 frml (alegrarse) to be delighted at: celebro que te cases, I'm so pleased you're getting married ' celebrar' also found in these entries: Spanish: mojar - festejar English: anniversary - celebrate - give - have - hold - mark - see in - wedding - election - meeting - officiate - perform -
8 officiating
adj.interino.ger.gerundio del verbo OFFICIATE.
См. также в других словарях:
Officiate — Of*fi ci*ate, v. t. To discharge, perform, or supply, as an official duty or function. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Merely to officiate light Round this opacous earth. Milton. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Officiate — Of*fi ci*ate, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Officiated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Officiating}.] [LL. officiare. See {Office}.] To act as an officer in performing a duty; to transact the business of an office or public trust; to conduct a public ceremony or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
officiate — I verb act, administer, carry out, command, conduct, direct, discharge a function, do duty, execute, exercise, fill an office, function, govern, guide, head, hold an office, lead, manage, minister, moderate, occupy the chair, officio fungi,… … Law dictionary
officiate at — index conduct Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
officiate — (v.) 1630s, to perform a duty, especially to perform the duty of a priest, from M.L. officiatum, pp. of officiare perform religious services, from L. officium (see OFFICE (Cf. office)). Related: Officiated; officiating … Etymology dictionary
officiate — [v] oversee, manage act, boss, chair, command, conduct, direct, do the honors*, emcee, function, govern, handle, preside, run, serve, superintend, umpire; concept 117 Ant. follow … New thesaurus
officiate — ► VERB 1) act as an official. 2) perform a religious service or ceremony. DERIVATIVES officiation noun officiator noun. ORIGIN Latin officiare perform divine service … English terms dictionary
officiate — [ə fish′ē āt΄] vi. officiated, officiating [< ML officiatus, pp. of officiare] 1. to perform the duties of an office; act as an officer 2. to perform the functions of a priest, minister, rabbi, etc. at a religious ceremony 3. Sports to act as… … English World dictionary
officiate — UK [əˈfɪʃɪeɪt] / US [əˈfɪʃɪˌeɪt] verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms officiate : present tense I/you/we/they officiate he/she/it officiates present participle officiating past tense officiated past participle officiated 1) to perform the… … English dictionary
officiate — of|fi|ci|ate [ ə fıʃi,eıt ] verb intransitive or transitive 1. ) to perform the official duties at a ceremony, especially a religious ceremony: officiate at: the priest who officiated at their wedding 2. ) to be in charge of a game or competition … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
officiate — verb Officiate is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑priest Officiate is used with these nouns as the object: ↑ceremony … Collocations dictionary