gremial
English
Etymology
Adjective
gremial (not comparable)
- Of or pertaining to the lap.
Noun
gremial (plural gremials)
- A decorated cloth placed on a bishop's lap whilst celebrating mass or ordaining priests.
- (obsolete) A bosom friend.
- 1840, Thomas Fuller, The History of the University of Cambridge
- These Friars living in these convents were capable of degrees, and kept their Acts, as other University-men. Yet were they gremials and not gremials, who sometimes would so stand on the tiptoes of their privileges, that they endeavoured to be higher than other students: so that oftentimes they and the scholars could not set their horses in one stable, or rather their books on one shelf.
- 1840, Thomas Fuller, The History of the University of Cambridge
Anagrams
Spanish
Etymology
Adjective
gremial (plural gremiales)
- labor union (attributive)
Derived terms
Terms derived from gremial
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