Associations to the word «Rector»
Noun
- Divinity
- Kingsley
- Kent
- Croft
- Sutton
- Yorkshire
- Oxford
- Bologna
- Worcester
- Cornwall
- Bucharest
- Vocation
- Heidelberg
- Eldest
- Halle
- Graz
- Jurist
- Kazan
- Elect
- Serving
- Devonshire
- Austen
- Grafton
- Hampshire
- Lincoln
- Warrington
- Patron
- Meade
- Connell
- Bury
- Guadalajara
- Manor
- Wight
- Mannheim
- Edmund
- Harrow
- Willoughby
- Newbury
- Shoemaker
- Helsinki
- Priory
- Mary
- Ghent
- Glamorgan
- Visitation
- Yerevan
- Riga
- Abbot
- Colchester
- Librarian
- Burnham
- Johannes
- Academic
- Mathematician
- Cuthbert
- Nicholas
- Sykes
- Trustee
- Magnus
- Manila
- Loyola
- Doctorate
- Thomas
- Xavier
- Pembroke
- Conservatory
- Oslo
- Di
- Arkansas
- Samuel
- Keane
- Warsaw
- Grammar
- Wigan
- Donegal
- Peterborough
- Lublin
- Goodwin
- Hatfield
- Bonnet
- Cardinal
- Barton
- Tenure
- Nathaniel
- Stockport
- Montrose
- Saint
- Cutler
Wiktionary
RECTOR, noun. In the Anglican Church, a cleric in charge of a parish and who owns the tithes of it.
RECTOR, noun. In the Roman Catholic Church, a cleric with managerial as well as spiritual responsibility for a church or other institution.
RECTOR, noun. A headmaster in various educational institutions, e.g. a university.
RECTOR, proper noun. An English surname; derived from the surname Richter.
RECTOR, proper noun. A city in Arkansas
Dictionary definition
RECTOR, noun. A person authorized to conduct religious worship; "clergymen are usually called ministers in Protestant churches".
Wise words
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