Examples of using Ecclesiastical in English and their translations into Arabic
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Colloquial
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Political
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Ecclesiastical/ Church.
This is an ecclesiastical matter.
Ecclesiastical/ Church.
This is an ecclesiastical court.
Ecclesiastical History of the Church of Christ.
People also translate
Council for Ecclesiastical Affairs.
Ecclesiastical History of the English People.
A distinct ecclesiastical government,".
And some of these books contain ecclesiastical law.
The Ecclesiastical Province of Bamenda.
Danish Ministry of Ecclesiastical Affairs.
The ecclesiastical purple and the pagan orange symbolising the symbiosis in marriage between heathen and Christian tradition?
The Russian Ecclesiastical Mission.
She no longer could swallow, but according to ecclesiastical law.
There is also an Ecclesiastical Court and a Magistrates Court.
President and/or member of the governing council of several charitable or ecclesiastical foundations.
There is enough for the ecclesiastical court to render a guilty verdict.
My son, these men are religious extremists, answerable to the ecclesiastical courts.
For example, Christian ecclesiastical law forbade marriage of a girl before the age of puberty.
Certain other parishes wish to have their ecclesiastical centre in Moscow.
October 1975-July 1976 Ecclesiastical training at the regional Grand Seminaire St. Robert Bellarmine, Mayidi, Congo. Studied philosophy and religion.
The Royal Commission on Ecclesiastical Courts.
Pope Gregory the Great. Reforms ecclesiastical structure and administration. Establishes Gregorian chant.
An episcopal see is, in the usual meaning of the phrase,the area of a bishop's ecclesiastical jurisdiction.[1][2].
John's Cathedral is the oldest surviving Western ecclesiastical building in Hong Kong, and the oldest Anglican church in the Far East.
Advocate- Courts of Justice and Ecclesiastical Tribunal(1984-).
Present Member(currently chairman) of the ecclesiastical law committee of the Old Catholic Church(which is in full communion with the Anglican and Episcopal churches).
Hardwicke's Marriage Act 1753 affirmed this existing ecclesiastical law and built it into statutory law.
Marriages celebrated according to the Greek Orthodox ecclesiastical law could be dissolved by family courts in accordance with the provisions of Law No. 23/90.
The Royal Commission on Ecclesiastical Discipline 1906.