oblate

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of oblate Sister Lydia Maria described to the women the duties of an oblate, such as saying prayers for people who request them. Lawrence Wright, The New Yorker, 10 Feb. 2025 For an oblate, prayer was an occupation, both a way to fill the day and a mystical way of healing the world. Lawrence Wright, The New Yorker, 10 Feb. 2025 As a result, the Earth's normal oblate shape, resembling a somewhat flattened sphere bulging at the equator, is flattening even more, Adhikari said. Julia Jacobo, ABC News, 15 July 2024 In the north, Solomon knew, young oblates, the cherished daughters of gentlewomen, were given to the Lord out of the ranks of the nobility. Cynthia Ozick, Harper’s Magazine , 10 Apr. 2023 But Earth is an oblate spheroid, meaning a 3D shape created by an ellipsis that’s rotating around its shorter axis—like a more rounded jelly donut. Caroline Delbert, Popular Mechanics, 12 Feb. 2020 This was unexpected at Jupiter—a heavy, fast rotating, oblate (flattened at the poles) planet. Andrew Coates, Newsweek, 8 Mar. 2018
Recent Examples of Synonyms for oblate
Noun
  • Prevost, 69, is the first Augustinian friar to become pope, the Vatican News reported.
    Erik Ortiz, NBC news, 9 May 2025
  • Then came the Reformation, a revolution brought on by a onetime friar named Martin Luther.
    Spencer Strub, New York Times, 14 Apr. 2025
Noun
  • Explore medieval monastic ruins on Innisfallen Island, and immerse yourself in ancient silence.
    Andrea Bussell, Travel + Leisure, 7 July 2025
  • While the Thai Buddhism depicted in The White Lotus is not completely realistic, there are several authentic ways to engage deeply with Buddhism, ranging from offering donations to short meditation retreats to ordination as a monastic.
    Brooke Schedneck, The Conversation, 27 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • The ceremony, where Tucker and Hudgens exchanged personalized vows, was officiated by former monk Jay Shetty.
    Charna Flam, People.com, 4 July 2025
  • The Trappist monk Thomas Merton describes a similar experience on the streets of Louisville, Kentucky, on a rare occasion when leaving his cloistered monastery.
    Nicole Villalpando, Austin American Statesman, 2 July 2025
Noun
  • Unlike monks who withdrew from ordinary life, mendicants stressed a life of poverty, spent in travel from town to town to preach and help the poor.
    Joanne M. Pierce, The Conversation, 27 May 2025
  • Instead of withdrawing from the world in isolated monasteries, members of this order travel as mendicants to aid the poor as well as serve as missionaries and teachers.
    Joanne M. Pierce, The Conversation, 9 May 2025
Noun
  • The end result was a new brand of ecclesiastics and lay Catholics who felt comfortable detaching themselves from Franco’s regime, or even fighting it head-on in a variety of forums, including student movements, intellectual circles, unions, political parties, and the media.
    Victor Pérez-Díaz, Foreign Affairs, 6 Dec. 2013
  • Of all the precious goods accumulated by the rulers and ecclesiastics of late medieval Ethiopia, the most charged of all were books.
    Peter Brown, The New York Review of Books, 24 Sep. 2020
Noun
  • In addition to his leadership and donations to Vanderbilt, Wills' other philanthropic ventures included serving as president of the YMCA of Metropolitan Nashville, president of the Tennessee Historical Society and a deacon and elder at The Downtown Presbyterian Church in Nashville.
    Hadley Hitson, The Tennessean, 2 July 2025
  • The church may very well have served as a hiding place in the Underground Railroad, given that March Haynes, a deacon of the church, was a known member of the network.
    Brienne Walsh, Forbes.com, 19 May 2025
Noun
  • What To Know The reverend had been in critical condition since suffering a heart attack at his home in Baton Rouge on June 14.
    Hannah Parry, MSNBC Newsweek, 1 July 2025
  • Jimmy Swaggart, the reverend who rose to prominence during the golden age of televangelism in the 1980s before a prostitution scandal rocked his evangelical empire, has died.
    EW.com, EW.com, 1 July 2025
Noun
  • Balmer, who visited him in Baton Rouge while researching a 1998 magazine piece about the disgraced preacher, said Swaggart struggled mightily after his fall from grace.
    Marc Ramirez, USA Today, 2 July 2025
  • The Pentecostal preacher was caught on camera with a prostitute in New Orleans in 1988, which led to his defrocking by the Assembly of God denomination.
    Hannah Parry, MSNBC Newsweek, 1 July 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Oblate.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/oblate. Accessed 19 Jul. 2025.

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