Definitions for officiant

officiant of·fi·ci·ant

Spelling: [uh-fish-ee-uh nt]
IPA: /əˈfɪʃ i ənt/

Officiant is a 9 letter English word. It's valid Words with friends word worth 19 points.

You can make 224 anagrams from letters in officiant (acffiinot).

Definitions for officiant

noun

  1. a person who officiates at a religious service or ceremony.

Origin of officiant

1835-45; Medieval Latin officiant- (stem of officiāns), present participle of officiāre to serve, equivalent to Latin offici(um) office + -ant-

Examples for officiant

Stripped of these frills, the only real expense of a prison wedding is the officiant.

"You are now ours as we are yours," replied the officiant, dropping the curtains.

It was the hammer of the officiant, who, with a loud blow on the platform, adjudged No. 42 irrevocably to Signor Polizzi.

The officiant paused a moment, stooped, and gathered and threw reverently on the coffin a handful of rattling coral.

This is the ancestor whom the rite commemorates; now the officiant need not be descended from him.

The officiant is one with the ancestor from whom he is descended and whom he reincarnates.

For fees ranging upward of $100, the officiant is the person who makes a prison marriage happen.

But if he means that there is no incarnation at all, we do not understand how the officiant and the ancestor can be confounded.

Finally, Saujani went on the Internet and found that an officiant could be hired to come to them.

We have already spoken of one of the means employed: the officiant pours water over the sacred stones and himself.

Word Value for officiant
Scrable

0

Words with friends

19

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