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  1. Dictionary
    ordain
    /ɔːˈdeɪn/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. ORDAIN definition: 1. to officially make someone a priest or other religious leader, in a religious ceremony: 2. (of…. Learn more.

  3. ordain. verb. or· dain ȯr-ˈdān. ordained; ordaining; ordains. Synonyms of ordain. transitive verb. 1. : to invest (see invest entry 2 sense 1) officially (as by the laying on of hands) with ministerial or priestly authority. was ordained as a priest. 2. a. : to establish or order by appointment, decree, or law : enact.

  4. To ordain is to make someone a minister, priest, monk, or other member of the clergy. In the Catholic church, for example, a bishop ordains new priests. When you say that people have been ordained, you usually mean that they've been invested with special religion-related powers.

  5. 1. to consecrate (someone) as a priest; confer holy orders upon. 2. (may take a clause as object) to decree, appoint, or predestine irrevocably. 3. (may take a clause as object) to order, establish, or enact with authority. 4. obsolete. to select for an office. Collins English Dictionary.

  6. to enact or establish by law, edict, etc.: to ordain a new type of government. to decree; give orders for: He ordained that the restrictions were to be lifted. Synonyms: determine, prescribe, order. (of God, fate, etc.) to destine or predestine: Fate had ordained the meeting. Synonyms: predetermine.

  7. verb [ T ] uk / ɔːˈdeɪn / us. Add to word list Add to word list. to officially make someone a Christian priest: [ often passive ] He was ordained by the Bishop of London. (Definition of ordain from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  8. Definition of ordain verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. ordain meaning, definition, what is ordain: to officially make someone a priest or r...: Learn more.

  10. 1. (Ecclesiastical Terms) to consecrate (someone) as a priest; confer holy orders upon. 2. ( may take a clause as object) to decree, appoint, or predestine irrevocably. 3. ( may take a clause as object) to order, establish, or enact with authority. 4. obsolete to select for an office.

  11. to enact or establish by law, edict, etc.: to ordain a new type of government. to decree; give orders for: He ordained that the restrictions were to be lifted. (of God, fate, etc.) to destine or predestine: Fate had ordained the meeting.