subdean


Also found in: Wikipedia.

subdean

(ˈsʌbˌdiːn)
n
(Professions) the deputy of a dean
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Mentioned in ?
References in periodicals archive ?
Fittingly, the Reverend Canon David Stone, subdean of Coventry Cathedral conducted the service - making the point that the Arsenal logo bears a cannon, hence the club's nickname being the Gunners.
The partbooks also contain a 'Christus resurgens' by Redford, a piece possibly by Richard Edwards, as well as work by Okeland, Thomas Wright (a vicar choral at St Paul's who died in 1558), William Whytbroke (a subdean at St Paul's from 1534 and a contributor to Certaine Notes), and William Munday (parish clerk at St Mary-at-Hill between 1548 and 1558, vicar choral at St Paul's in the late 1550s, and also later a member of the Chapel Royal), suggesting substantial links between the contributors, the cathedral and even St Mary-at-Hill.
In fact, only the prefixes arce- and sub- are of foreign nature and their use is restricted to the loans arcebisceop 'archbishop', and its derivatives, and subdiacon 'subdean'.
RICHARD THOMSON, Consultant Gastroenterologist and Clinical Subdean, North Tyneside General Hospital, UK.
But Dr Phil Matthews, subdean for postgraduate medical and dental education in Wales, said general practice was still attractive to newly-qualified doctors - there were 422 applicants for 144 GP training places in Wales this year - and that the majority of GPs who train in Wales will stay here to work for a few years.
Nicholas Coulton, subdean of Oxford Cathedral and spokesman for the Association of English Cathedrals,added: ``Cathedralshave always been expensive to run and since the Middle Ages they have looked to attracting outside investment in order to survive.''
Also dealing with victims of war, but now at one remove, is Judith Bingham's My Father's Arms, set-ting for soprano (the excellent Helen Meyerhoff communicative despite the lofty proscenium taking much of the edge off her diction) and string trio poems by Martin Shaw, subdean of St Edmundsbury Cathedral.
In 1673, for example, Stephen Bing was paid [pounds]2 for 'ruled papyr for a set of Quirebooks' for Westminster Abbey(5) and a number of payments made to the court musicians Nicholas Staggins and Pelham Humphrey, and to William Holder, subdean of the Chapel Royal, include an allowance - unfortunately unspecified - for the cost of ruled paper.(6) In Oxford on 20 January 1656/7 Anthony Wood paid 6d for 'rul'd paper' and at the same time bought 'Mr.
Max Warren was the major British missiologist of the mid-twentieth century.(1) He influenced mission worldwide through his twenty-one years as general secretary of the Church Missionary Society from 1942 to 1963 and through his later ministry as canon and subdean of Westminster Abbey for a further ten years, 1963-73.
Among the group of eleven was Yolanda Huet-Vaughn, a physician and a captain in the Army Reserve Medical Corps who refused orders to participate in what she considers "an immoral, inhumane and unconstitutional act, namely an offensive military mobilization in the Middle East"; Charles Rangel of New York, one of three Congressmen who endorsed the march on Washington; a rabbi; the subdean of the Cathedral of St.
The Bishop of Durham, The Rt Rev Justin Welby - who was a curate in Nuneaton and a rector in Southam before becoming a subdean and canon at Coventry Cathedral - was yesterday announced as the 105th Archbishop and spiritual leader of the 77 million-strong Anglican Communion.
Third, in general, no major, overt ecclesiastical clash of interests seems to have intruded upon the city's relations either with the bishop as diocesan, the subdean, whose peculiar the city was, or the cathedral chapter.