What's the difference between nonage and parishioner?

Nonage


Definition:

  • (n.) The ninth part of movable goods, formerly payable to the clergy on the death of persons in their parishes.
  • (n.) Time of life before a person becomes of age; legal immaturity; minority.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Therefore, protection from neuropathic doses of effective OPs is obtained when NTE is mostly inhibited with nonageable inhibitors.
  • (2) In a randomized trial of the effects of medical insurance on spending and the health status of the nonaged, we previously reported that patients with limited cost sharing had approximately one-third less use of medical services, similar general self-assessed health, and worse blood pressure, functional far vision, and dental health than those with free care.
  • (3) We report the prevalence and impact of chronic bronchitis (defined as having phlegm on most days for at least 3 months during the previous year) among 4,708 adults ages 20 to 69 representative of the nonaged U.S. population.
  • (4) Two aspects of physician participation form the focus of the study: 1) the percentage of physicians participating in Medicaid in a given county and 2) the average number of nonaged, Medicaid patients treated by each participating physician.
  • (5) The data are from the Rand Health Insurance Experiment, which has a random sample of the nonaged, noninstitutionalized, civilian population in six U.S. sites.
  • (6) In support of this, we report that prior exposure to a nonaging NTE inhibitor, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), protects rats from neurological damage after subsequent exposure to a neurotoxic OP, Mipafox.
  • (7) Prophylactic against OPIDP should thus be achieved by production of an inhibited but "nonaging" NTE.
  • (8) Thus, interaction of the pyrene moiety with the polypeptide chain is significantly stronger in the aged than in the nonaged conjugate, implying a different orientation of the fluorophore with respect to the protein.
  • (9) Health insurance was randomly assigned to families representative of the nonaged, noninstitutionalized civilian population in six U.S. sites.
  • (10) Protection against OPIDP should thus be achieved by production of an inhibited but "nonaging" NTE.
  • (11) Children's prejudice against the aged was studied in terms of their responses to an attitude scale and measures of their social interaction with aged compared to nonaged confederates.
  • (12) The focus is on an examination of detailed age groups, rather than summary aged and nonaged groups--thus providing a more complete picture of age differences.
  • (13) Homologous aged and nonaged fluorescent organophosphorus conjugates of alpha-chymotrypsin (Cht) were used in a comparative spectroscopic study of the conformation of their active sites, employing the pyrene group as the fluorescent probe.
  • (14) The income of the aged as a whole grew faster than that of the nonaged in the 1970's and early 1980's when real social security benefits increased faster than inflation and wages lagged behind it.
  • (15) For the same reason, we may leave out of consideration those backward states of society in which the race itself may be considered as in its nonage.
  • (16) There were six measures of participant interaction with aged compared to nonaged confederates: proxemic distance, productivity, eye-contact initiation, number of words spoken, number of conversation initiations, and number of verbal appeals.
  • (17) When wealth is considered in addition to cash income, the economic status of the aged improves relative to that of the nonaged.
  • (18) Among all the organophosphates tested, the combination of a methyl group and a negatively charged oxygen attached to the P atom, CH3P(O)(O-)-AChE, conferred the greatest protection to the active site of aged or nonaged organophosphoryl conjugates of acetylcholinesterase.
  • (19) When noncash income is considered in addition to cash income, the income of the aged tends to improve relative to that of the nonaged, but serious measurement problems exist.
  • (20) The relative income gains of the aged, compared with the nonaged, in 1967-84 reversed an earlier pattern in the post-World-War-II period: From 1947 to 1967, the incomes of the nonaged rose at a faster pace than those of the aged.

Parishioner


Definition:

  • (n.) One who belongs to, or is connected with, a parish.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) I dream about this, the same thing every single night.” He talks of the paranoia that arose after the mass shooting two months after Scott’s death at a black church in Charleston, a few miles away, where a 21-year-old white supremacist is accused of murdering nine parishioners at a prayer service.
  • (2) To read more about the position of Irish churches on gay marriage, read here , this analysis on why that position may be unconvincing, and this piece on the priests who are urging their parishioners to vote yes.
  • (3) News of the tragedy had spread through the community, with a Rouse Hill Catholic church holding a special prayer service and urging parishioners to keep the twins in their hearts.
  • (4) Belmondo could treat women tenderly (as the priest dealing with an ardent parishioner in Léon Morin, prêtre) and harshly (beating up a treacherous moll in Le Doulos).
  • (5) Perhaps the church perceived these women, with their special, often esoteric, healing skills, as a threat to its supremacy in the lives of its parishioners.
  • (6) Others have claimed that a number of local priests refused to grant absolution to parishioners who were planning to vote yes to divorce.
  • (7) Even the church weighed in: The Archbishop of Cyprus urged Russians not to flee the country, while humble parishioners faced tough times.
  • (8) But he added: “They will all be anxious to promote the pope’s message.” Some priests and bishops, especially those in conservative parts of the country, or where the local economy is heavily dependent on extractive industries, would welcome the pope’s intervention for giving them licence at last to touch on subjects they dared not raise for fear of offending their parishioners.
  • (9) Luke was one of several parishioners' pets attending services prior to an animal blessing in honour of St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals.
  • (10) As a curate, he startled the Cambridge parishioners of St Andrew's, Chesterton, by bicycling in a cassock and a biretta, though eventually the bicycle chain chewed up the cassock.
  • (11) A dozen gay ministers are to sign an open letter that also urges the church to allow clergy to carry out blessings for parishioners entering into same-sex marriages.
  • (12) Even Swedish churches have adapted, displaying their phone numbers at the end of each service and asking parishioners to use Swish to drop their contribution into the virtual Sunday collection.
  • (13) A minister in Bradford since 1976, Flowers was suspended indefinitely by the church last year, and has since told parishioners he intends to retire.
  • (14) But if Trump really does move to enact mass deportations, a lot of the potential victims will be Catholic parishioners.
  • (15) Church of England bishops are being cowed by a small group of “super-conservative puritans” who believe homosexuality is a sin, leaving most too scared to speak out in support of gay and lesbian clergy and parishioners, according a leading gay vicar who is quitting the priesthood.
  • (16) That’s very true.” But it isn’t enough, Young says: compassion is a Christian virtue, too, and his black parishioners don’t see enough of it from the right.
  • (17) Britain was not working big time, and many of my parishioners were struggling with the poverty this brought into their homes.
  • (18) Linda Arendt, another Faith Presbyterian parishioner, says she’s not convinced she wants to vote for anyone in the race – she saw a meme (she says même – we’re not far from New Orleans) of “a little boy having the most awful tantrum, saying, ‘Please don’t make me vote for any of these people.
  • (19) Snowden said professionals were failing in their obligations to their clients, sources, patients and parishioners in what he described as a new and challenging world.
  • (20) He spent an hour studying with the dozen parishioners in the Bible study room and then opened fire, striking each victim “multiple times”.

Words possibly related to "nonage"

Words possibly related to "parishioner"