Boozer
08-10-05, 05:47PM
acolyte • \AK-uh-lyte\ • noun
1 : one who assists a member of the clergy in a liturgical service by performing minor duties
*2 : one who attends or assists : follower
Example sentence:
The lawyer arrived with one of her acolytes, an eager young attorney who looked at her with obvious admiration.
Did you know?
Follow the etymological path of "acolyte" back far enough and you'll arrive at "keleuthos," a Greek noun that means "path" and that is itself the parent of "akolouthos," an adjective that means "following." "Akolouthos" traveled from Greek, leaving offspring in Medieval Latin and Anglo-French, and its descendant, "acolyte," emerged in English in the 14th century. Originally, it was exclusively a term for a person who assisted a priest at Mass, but by the 19th century, "acolyte" had acquired additional meanings, among them "attendant body, satellite" (a meaning used in astronomy) and "attendant insect" (a zoological sense), as well as the general meaning "assistant" or "sidekick."
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
I never was much of an acolyte.
1 : one who assists a member of the clergy in a liturgical service by performing minor duties
*2 : one who attends or assists : follower
Example sentence:
The lawyer arrived with one of her acolytes, an eager young attorney who looked at her with obvious admiration.
Did you know?
Follow the etymological path of "acolyte" back far enough and you'll arrive at "keleuthos," a Greek noun that means "path" and that is itself the parent of "akolouthos," an adjective that means "following." "Akolouthos" traveled from Greek, leaving offspring in Medieval Latin and Anglo-French, and its descendant, "acolyte," emerged in English in the 14th century. Originally, it was exclusively a term for a person who assisted a priest at Mass, but by the 19th century, "acolyte" had acquired additional meanings, among them "attendant body, satellite" (a meaning used in astronomy) and "attendant insect" (a zoological sense), as well as the general meaning "assistant" or "sidekick."
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
I never was much of an acolyte.