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ITINERANCY Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
noun. the act of traveling from place to place . a going around from place to place in the discharge of duty or the conducting of business. a body of itinerants, as ministers, judges, or sales representatives. the state of being itinerant.
www.dictionary.com
www.dictionary.com
ITINERANCY Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1. a system (as in the Methodist Church) of rotating ministers who itinerate 2. a : the act of itinerating b : the state of being itinerant.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
To be United Methodist: What is “itineracy”? | ResourceUMC
“Itinerancy” refers specifically to the commitment by pastors to go and serve wherever their bishops send them.
www.resourceumc.org
www.resourceumc.org
itinerancy
itinerancy (aɪˈtɪnərənsɪ, ɪt-) [f. next: see -ancy.] 1. The state or condition of being itinerant; the action of itinerating or travelling about, esp. for a specific purpose, as preaching or public speaking; a journey from place to place.1802–12 Bentham Ration. Judic. Evid. (1827) IV. 197 Has he a f...
Oxford English Dictionary
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ITINERANCY definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
1. a. an itinerating, or traveling from place to place b. the state of being itinerant 2. a group of itinerant preachers or judges 3. official work requiring ...
www.collinsdictionary.com
www.collinsdictionary.com
Glossary: itineracy, itinerancy | UMC.org
UMC glossary defines itineracy: system of clergy appointment and rotation within the United Methodist Church, enabling ministry across different ...
www.umc.org
www.umc.org
The Homestretch (2014 film)
review and said: "This empathetic documentary is a portrait of three juveniles—Roque, Kasey, and Anthony—and their struggle to extricate themselves from itinerancy
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
A Spirit of Itinerancy | Breaking In The Habit
As itinerants, friars are constantly on the move: we change dwelling places, ministries, friar communities, and schedules.
breakinginthehabit.org
breakinginthehabit.org
Why Itinerancy? - Texas Annual Conference
At its most elemental level, itinerancy is the commitment of clergy to go wherever they are needed. Assistant to the Bishop, B.T. Williamson ...
www.txcumc.org
www.txcumc.org
itinerancy, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English ...
The earliest known use of the noun itinerancy is in the late 1700s. OED's earliest evidence for itinerancy is from 1789, in the writing of John Wesley, ...
www.oed.com
www.oed.com
Itinerancy - The Methodist Church
Itinerancy means Methodist ministers are available for deployment by the Conference, with a primary relationship to the Conference, not the context.
www.methodist.org.uk
www.methodist.org.uk
itinerancy - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
itinerancy (usually uncountable, plural itinerancies). The state or quality of being itinerant. I went through a period of itinerancy in my youth.
en.wiktionary.org
en.wiktionary.org
itineracy
itineracy (aɪˈtɪnərəsɪ, ɪt-) [f. itinerate a.: see -acy 3.] = itinerancy in its various senses.1827 Lamb Sir J. Dunstan, Returning in an evening, after his long day's itineracy, to his domicile. 1870 Anderson Missions Amer. Bd. I. iv. 89 The year 1833 was distinguished for itineracies. 1875 Warburto...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Halting site
The Commission on Itinerancy travelled to the Netherlands in September 1961 to consider the policy there. The Itinerancy Commission report in 1963 expressed satisfaction with the results of the Netherlands policy:
1.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
itinerarily
iˈtinerarily, adv. rare. Also 7 Sc. -arly. [f. itinerary + -ly2.] In an itinerary way; in the course of itinerancy.1670 Ld. Fountainhall in M. P. Brown Suppl. Decis. (1826) II. 470 Though he was Bishop of the Isles, and died there, yet..when he went there it was only itinerarly.
Oxford English Dictionary
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