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rectorate

American  
[rek-ter-it] / ˈrɛk tər ɪt /
Or rectorship

noun

  1. the office, dignity, or term of a rector.


Etymology

Origin of rectorate

1715–25; < Medieval Latin rēctōrātus office of rector, equivalent to Latin rēctōr- (stem of rēctor ) rector + -ātus -ate 3

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Appleton Lawrence got his first cure in 1913, as assistant in Grace Church in Lawrence, Mass., where his forebears had owned mills and where his father held his first and only rectorate.

From Time Magazine Archive

Last January, when Johannes Mathias Gijsen, 39, was named to the see from the rectorate of an old-folks home, hardly anyone knew who he was.

From Time Magazine Archive

Of the northern district the new rectorate of San Francisco Xavier was now formed.

From The Colonization of North America 1492-1783 by Bolton, Herbert Eugene

His rectorate," says Claretta, "was the golden age of the Abbey of La Chiusa, which reaped the glory acquired by its head in the difficult negotiations entrusted to him by his princes.

From Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino by Butler, Samuel

In the spring of 1877, during the rectorate of Reverend E. C. Murdaugh at St. George’s Church, questions arose as to certain forms of the Episcopal ritual.

From Historic Fredericksburg The Story of an Old Town by Goolrick, John T.

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