minister

minister
noun
1 (BrE) member of the government
ADJECTIVE
prime
chief, principal (both historical)
deputy
junior, senior
cabinet, departmental, EU, Foreign Office, government, Home Office
defence, education, environment, finance, foreign, health, interior, justice, transport, etc.
former, outgoing
VERB + MINISTER
appoint (sb), appoint sb as, be named, nominate (sb), nominate sb as
elect (sb), elect sb as
dismiss (sb as)
serve as

He served briefly as prime minister from 1920 to 1921.

lobby, persuade, urge

Groups are lobbying the Transport Minister over the issue.

advise, consult, instruct
accuse, criticize
MINISTER + VERB
resign, retire
be accountable to sb, be responsible for sth

Ministers are accountable to Parliament.

the minister responsible for the health service

announce sth, declare sth, unveil sth
agree sth, agree to sth, approve sth, decide sth, endorse sth
intervene (in sth)

The foreign minister intervened with disastrous results.

PREPOSITION
minister for

the new minister for the Arts

minister of

A new minister of defence had been appointed.

⇨ See also ↑prime minister
2 priest
ADJECTIVE
Christian, Presbyterian, Protestant, etc.
evangelical
ordained
VERB + MINISTER
ordain (sb), ordain sb as

He was ordained minister of a small rural congregation.

preach (sth)
PHRASES
a minister of religion

Collocations dictionary. 2013.

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Synonyms:

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Minister(in) — Minister(in) …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • Minister — • Even before the Reformation the word minister was occasionally used in English to describe those of the clergy actually taking part in a function, or the celebrant as distinguished from the assistants, but it was not then used sine addito to… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • minister — min‧is‧ter [ˈmɪnstə ǁ ər] noun [countable] in Britain and some other countries, a politician who is a member of the government and is either in charge of or has an important job in a government department: • a meeting of EU finance ministers •… …   Financial and business terms

  • minister — MINISTÉR, ministere, s.n. 1. Organ central al administraţiei de stat care conduce o anumită ramură a activităţii statului şi care este condus de un ministru; instituţia respectivă; p. ext. clădirea în care îşi are sediul această instituţie. 2.… …   Dicționar Român

  • Minister — can mean several things: Minister (Christianity), a Christian who ministers in some way Minister (diplomacy), the rank of diplomat directly below ambassador Minister (government), a politician who heads a ministry (government department) Shadow… …   Wikipedia

  • Minister — Sm std. (14. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus l. minister Diener , zu l. minor kleiner, geringer . Die Bedeutung Regierungsmitglied im 17. Jh. aus frz. ministre desselben Ursprungs (in merowingischer Zeit war das ministerium der Haus und Hofdienst… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • minister to — ˈminister to [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they minister to he/she/it ministers to present participle ministering to past tense ministered to …   Useful english dictionary

  • Minister — Min is*ter, n. [OE. ministre, F. ministre, fr. L. minister, orig. a double comparative from the root of minor less, and hence meaning, an inferior, a servant. See 1st {Minor}, and cf. {Master}, {Minstrel}.] [1913 Webster] 1. A servant; a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Minister — Min is*ter, v. i. 1. To act as a servant, attendant, or agent; to attend and serve; to perform service in any office, sacred or secular. [1913 Webster] The Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister. Matt. xx. 28. [1913 Webster] 2 …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Minister — Minister: Die Bezeichnung für »oberster ‹Verwaltungs›beamter des Staates; Mitglied der Regierung« wurde im 17. Jh. aus gleichbed. frz. ministre (eigentlich »Diener«, dann etwa »Diener des Staates; mit einem politischen Amt Beauftragter«) entlehnt …   Das Herkunftswörterbuch

  • minister — [n1] person in charge of church abbot, archbishop, archdeacon, bishop, chaplain, clergy, clergyperson, cleric, clerical, clerk, confessor, curate, deacon, dean, diocesan, divine, ecclesiastic, lecturer, missionary, monk, parson, pastor, preacher …   New thesaurus

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