curate

views 3,211,072 updated May 17 2018

cu·rate1 / ˈkyoŏrət; -ˌrāt/ • n. (also assistant curate) a member of the clergy engaged as assistant to a vicar, rector, or parish priest. ∎ archaic a minister with pastoral responsibility.cu·rate2 / ˈkyoŏˌrāt/ • v. [tr.] select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition).DERIVATIVES: cu·ra·tion / kyəˈrāshən/ n.

curate

views 1,962,709 updated May 29 2018

curate a member of the clergy engaged as assistant to a vicar, rector, or parish priest. The word is recorded from Middle English, and comes from medieval Latin curatus, from Latin cura ‘care’.
curate's comfort a cake-stand with two or more tiers.
curate's egg a thing that is partly good and partly bad, from a cartoon in Punch (1895) depicting a meek curate who, given a stale egg at the bishop's table, assures his host that ‘parts of it are excellent’.

curate

views 2,562,125 updated Jun 27 2018

curate (arch.) one having the cure of souls XIV; assistant to a parish priest XVI. — medL. cūrātus, f. cūra CURE; see -ATE 1.
Hence curacy XVII.

curate

views 3,363,485 updated Jun 11 2018

curate (Lat. cura charge) Clergyman who assists the incumbent priest of a parish in the performance of his duties. The term was originally used to denote a priest who had the charge of a parish.

Curate

views 2,962,585 updated May 21 2018

Curate. A Christian clergyman who has the charge (‘cure’) of a parish.

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