What's the difference between parsonage and personage?

Parsonage


Definition:

  • (n.) A certain portion of lands, tithes, and offerings, for the maintenance of the parson of a parish.
  • (n.) The glebe and house, or the house only, owned by a parish or ecclesiastical society, and appropriated to the maintenance or use of the incumbent or settled pastor.
  • (n.) Money paid for the support of a parson.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) This led to recognize the nosological relationships of these atypical cases with Parsonage-Turner's syndrome and to emphasize the similarities with Guillain-Barré syndrome.
  • (2) I decide to visit Saint Central - the parsonage museum at Haworth - to see if anything of the real Charlotte remains.
  • (3) Only five cases could be considered as definite Parsonage Turner's "shoulder girdle" syndrome.
  • (4) A recent proposal (Maggio, M. B., Pagan, J., Parsonage, D., Hatch, L., and Senior, A. E. (1987) J. Biol.
  • (5) The low Km for nitrate observed in the duriquinol assay is comparable with the apparent Km(NO-3) recently reported for intact cells of P. denitrificans [Parsonage, D., Greenfield, A. J.
  • (6) A 73-year-old women presented with a recurrent form of sporadic brachial plexus neuropathy, the so-called Parsonage and Turner syndrome.
  • (7) A previously healthy 38-year-old man presented a typical Parsonage-Turner syndrome (PTS) three weeks after a cold and unusual muscular exercise.
  • (8) Overall, the data give strong support to previously proposed mechanisms of unisite catalysis, steady-state catalysis, and energy coupling in F1-ATPases (Al-Shawi, M. K., Parsonage, D. and Senior, A. E. (1990) J. Biol.
  • (9) Recognising the implications of this, at the Church of England we have begun to put our own houses in order – churches, schools, halls and parsonages - through our Shrinking the Footprint campaign .
  • (10) She has been chained, weeping, to a radiator in the Haworth Parsonage, Yorkshire, for too long.
  • (11) The authors have analyzed the anamnestic, clinical and laboratory data in 44 patients with Parsonage-Turner syndrome.
  • (12) Comparison of the fluxes of enzyme-bound species detected experimentally in the presence of 2 mM phosphate with those predicted by computer simulation of published rate constants determined for uni-site catalysis (Al-Shawi, M.D., Parsonage, D. and Senior, A.E.
  • (13) The collection and assessment of more evidence is needed before Parsonage and Neuburger's proposition can be supported.
  • (14) This case report suggests that giant cell arteritis be considered in the investigation of the Parsonage and Turner syndrome.
  • (15) From 1971 to 1983 we observed 58 cases of the Parsonage-Turner syndrome.
  • (16) Pictures of the "Brontë waterfall" are gushing noisily over the front of the parsonage.
  • (17) Two typical cases of Parsonage-Turner syndrome with reflex sympathetic dystrophy syndrome and adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder are reported.
  • (18) Paralytic brachial neuritis or Parsonage-Turner syndrome principally involves the shoulder girdle, rarely muscles moving the hand and fingers.
  • (19) These effects are discussed in terms of a structural model of the catalytic nucleotide-binding domain of beta-subunit proposed recently (Duncan, T.M., Parsonage, D., and Senior, A.E.
  • (20) I’d encourage people to visit Haworth and the Brontë Parsonage Museum , which was the lifelong family home of the Brontës.

Personage


Definition:

  • (n.) Form, appearance, or belongings of a person; the external appearance, stature, figure, air, and the like, of a person.
  • (n.) Character assumed or represented.
  • (n.) A notable or distinguished person; a conspicious or peculiar character; as, an illustrious personage; a comely personage of stature tall.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The 200th anniversary of the death of Christian Andreas Cothenius gave occasion to appreciate life and work of this personage of a physician.
  • (2) One is a statue of Queen Victoria, the other a family of abstract personages by Hepworth, taken from her larger work The Family of Man and placed here as a monument after her death.
  • (3) The pedigree provides a guide to related personages and a data base for analysis.
  • (4) All that is required of any foreign personage is to speed along the line of greeters, murmuring: "Jolly good show – carry on."
  • (5) She was only the eleventh woman to do so, and never expected it; a lack of expectation that was in itself a kind of artistic freedom, for if you don't think of yourself as an august personage, you don't have to behave yourself.
  • (6) Analysing the multiple factors influencing traffic safety, the results showed that the upper-limit-age of a train driver should not be more than 50 years old; The phenomenon "bathtub" between personage accident rate and age must be taken seriously.
  • (7) This part, proposes the analysis of the psychopathological types (cyclic psychosis of Lazare, the "typus melancholicus" of Véronique, the paranoia of madam Chanteau, the "crack" and masochism of Pauline) and the pathogenic-situations in the most narrow interaction ("in" and "out" of the personages).
  • (8) He was acquainted and treated some of the more eminent personages of his time and published some remarkable medical works as the Index Disocorides, Commentaries on Discorides and the Centuries of Medical Cures which outlived him and were many times edited all over Europe.
  • (9) Nowadays he tends to be placed in the deeper positions appropriate to a personage of such seniority.
  • (10) Hereby the development of these personages was briefly outlined.
  • (11) The form is based on a £10 note with, of course, the Queen presiding over the image – but not depicted as the stern regal personage of our real currency, but rather as if she were “your auntie”, says Perry.
  • (12) Alongside such uplifting stereotypes were ruder ones, comprising the well-known " Sardarji" (the Hindi colloquialism for the Sikh) jokes , portraying a dim but well-intentioned personage.
  • (13) The heredo-morphological pioneer research of Prof. Nelis on eight personages from five generations of the same family is unique.
  • (14) In the Russian medicinal and scientific organization of the early 18th century decisively promoted by Czar Peter I such personages as the physicians Johann Deodat Blumentrost and Laurentius Blumentrost have obtained important key positions.
  • (15) Yet even if the phone-hacking allegations were to spread to his employers the Sun, my bet is Jeremy wouldn't resign in disgust at the intrusion on his personage.
  • (16) Often these were costume pictures about historical personages, ranging from Lady Hamilton (1967) - he played the cuckolded Sir William Hamilton - to Lady Caroline Lamb (1972), with Mills as George Canning.
  • (17) On past form Mr Murdoch may at some stage offer "guarantees" of editorial independence to be overseen by distinguished personages.
  • (18) It was here that we first heard of "the unreliable narrator", a personage now familiar from any number of book reviews or broadcast literary discussions.
  • (19) From Cambridge no less a personage than Richard Evans , the Regius Professor of History, condemned Gove's attempt to restore "rote learning of the patriotic stocking-fillers so beloved of traditionalists".
  • (20) He's tasked with defending her royal personage and not wigging out when she emerges from a funeral pyre naked with baby dragons crawling over her shoulder.

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