gerent
See also: gèrent
English
editEtymology
editFrom Latin gerēns, present participle of gerō.
Noun
editgerent (plural gerents)
- (rare) A manager.
- 1851, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, transl., Prometheus Bound:
- Yet Zeus, howbeit most absolute of will,
Shall turn to meekness,—such a marriage-rite
He holds in preparation, which anon
Shall thrust him headlong from his gerent seat,
And leave no track behind!
- 1862 February 8, The London Review and Weekly Journal of Politics, Literature, Art, & Society[1], volume 4, page 141:
- The "college," an institution of which the Reverend Mr. Easy is the gerent, was founded as Mr. Jeaffreson makes it pleasantly appear, by an "old woman," one Lady Arabella Howard, who died at the rip age of ninety-three, bequeathing large landed estates for the support and instruction of the poor in the highly favoured vicinity of Farnham Cobb.
- 1878, Dublin Review[2], volume 83, page 270:
- On this account the people who were the gerents of this Sovereignty were brought by a disposition of Divine Providence into contact with the Hebrew people, and made by this means into instruments for the diffusion of the true monotheistic religion.
- 2009, Tariq Ramadan, Islam, the West and the Challenges of Modernity[3], page 88:
- The process of secularisation is very clearly the process by which the gerent claimed his rights after being long suppressed by the authority of the Church.
Derived terms
editAnagrams
editBreton
editNoun
editgerent
- Soft mutation of kerent.
Catalan
editEtymology
editNoun
editgerent m or f by sense (plural gerents)
Further reading
edit- “gerent” in Diccionari de la llengua catalana, segona edició, Institut d’Estudis Catalans.
- “gerent”, in Gran Diccionari de la Llengua Catalana, Grup Enciclopèdia Catalana, 2024
- “gerent” in Diccionari normatiu valencià, Acadèmia Valenciana de la Llengua.
- “gerent” in Diccionari català-valencià-balear, Antoni Maria Alcover and Francesc de Borja Moll, 1962.
Latin
editVerb
editgerent
Categories:
- English terms derived from Latin
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with rare senses
- English terms with quotations
- Breton non-lemma forms
- Breton mutated nouns
- Breton soft-mutation forms
- Catalan terms borrowed from Latin
- Catalan terms derived from Latin
- Catalan lemmas
- Catalan nouns
- Catalan countable nouns
- Catalan feminine nouns with no feminine ending
- Catalan masculine nouns
- Catalan feminine nouns
- Catalan nouns with multiple genders
- Catalan masculine and feminine nouns by sense
- Latin non-lemma forms
- Latin verb forms