FATHER vs LORD: NOUN
- In general, any real or apparent generating cause or source; that which gives rise to anything; a mainspring or moving element in a system or a process: as, “the boy is father of the man.”
- One who creates, invents, originates, or establishes anything; the author, former, or contriver; a founder, director, or instructor; the first to practise any art; specifically, in the plural, the authors, founders, or first promoters of any great work, movement, or organization: as, Gutenberg was the father of printing; the fathers of the church (which see, below); the pilgrim fathers (see pilgrim); the fathers of the American Constitution.
- In universities, originally, a regent master fulfilling certain functions toward an inceptor; now, a fellow of a college appointed to attend a university examination in the interest of the students of that college.
- The eldest member of any profession, or of any body: as, father of the bar (the oldest practitioner of law); father of the House of Representatives or of the House of Commons (the man who has been a member of the body for the longest continuous period).
- The title of a senator in ancient Rome. See conscript fathers, under conscript.
- A member of one of various Roman Catholic fraternities: as, Fathers of the Oratory, etc.
- A title given to dignitaries of the Roman Catholic and Eastern churches, to officers of monasteries and commonly to monks in general, and to confessors and priests.
- A respectful title bestowed on a venerable man; an appellation of reverence or honor: as, Father Abraham.
- [capitalized] In orthodox Christian phraseology, the first person of the Trinity.
- [capitalized] The Supreme Being.
- One who exercises paternal care over another; a fatherly protector or provider.
- One who through marriage or adoption occupies the position of a male parent; a father-in-law; a stepfather.
- A male ancestor more remote than a parent; a lineal male ancestor, especially the first ancestor; the progenitor or founder of a race, family, or line: as, Ishmael was the father of the Bedouins of the desert.
- He who begets a child; the nearest male ancestor; a male parent: so called in relation to the child.
- The Sultan of Turkey.
- Used as a title and form of address with or without the clergyman's name.
- A priest or clergyman in the Roman Catholic or Anglican churches.
- A member of the senate in ancient Rome.
- A church father.
- One of the leading men, as of a city.
- An elderly or venerable man. Used as a title of respect.
- The first person of the Christian Trinity.
- God.
- A man who serves or is thought of as a protector.
- A man who creates, originates, or founds something.
- A male ancestor.
- A male parent of an animal.
- A man who raises a child.
- A man who adopts a child.
- A male whose impregnation of a female results in the birth of a child.
- A male whose sperm unites with an egg, producing an embryo.
- A person who founds or establishes some institution
- (Christianity) any of about 70 theologians in the period from the 2nd to the 7th century whose writing established and confirmed official church doctrine; in the Roman Catholic Church some were later declared saints and became Doctor of the Church; the best known Lation Church Fathers are Ambrose, Augustine, Gregory the Great, and Jerome; those who wrote in Greek include Athanasius, Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, and John Chrysostom
- The founder of a family
- The head of an organized crime family
- A person who holds an important or distinguished position in some organization
- `Father' is a term of address for priests in some churches (especially the Roman Catholic Church or the Orthodox Catholic Church); `Padre' is frequently used in the military
- A male parent (also used as a term of address to your father)
- God when considered as the first person in the Trinity
- One of the constituent parts of the British Parliament, consisting of the lords spiritual and temporal.
- The Savior; Jesus Christ.
- The Supreme Being; Jehovah.
- One of whom a fee or estate is held; the male owner of feudal land
- A title bestowed on the persons above named; and also, for honor, on certain official persons
- A titled nobleman., whether a peer of the realm or not; a bishop, as a member of the House of Lords; by courtesy; the son of a duke or marquis, or the eldest son of an earl; in a restricted sense, a baron, as opposed to noblemen of higher rank.
- One who has power and authority; a master; a ruler; a governor; a prince; a proprietor, as of a manor.
- A hump-backed person; -- so called sportively.
- The love-feast or agape, especially in the primitive church, whether accompanying the sacrament or apart from it.
- In Great Britain and Ireland, the principal official of a county, who has under him deputy lieutenants, and controls the appointment of justices of the peace and the issue of commissions in the local military organizations. The office was originally created for the defense of the counties in times of disturbance.
- One who goes foremost through the harvest with the seythe or the sickle.
- An honorary title bestowed in Great Britain on certain official personages, generally as part of a designation.
- A nobleman; a title of honor in Great Britain given to those who are noble by birth or creation: applied to peers of the realm, of Scotland, and of Ireland, including dukes, marquises, earls, viscounts, and barons.
- The proprietor of a manor; the grantor under whom feudal tenants held, for whom he was to some extent responsible, and over whom he had authority. The word, with its meaning modified, is retained in the modern term landlord.
- A title of respect formerly given to persons of superior rank or consideration, especially in the phrase of address ‘my lord,’ as to kings and princes, monks or other ecclesiastics, a husband, etc.: still used humorously of a husband with reference to his wife.
- [capitalized] In Scripture, and in general Christian use, the Supreme Being; Jehovah: with the definite article except in address; also applied to Christ, who is called the Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord, or our Lord.
- A master or ruler; a man possessing supreme authority or power of control; a monarch, governor, chief, proprietor, or paramount disposer.
- A hunchback.
- In astrology, a planet that exercises dominion: thus, the ruler of the sign or the cusp of the first house in a nativity is termed lord of the ascendant or of the geniture. See lord of the ascendant, under ascendant, 1.
- A husband.
- The male head of a household.
- A man who has mastery in a given field or activity.
- A man of renowned power or authority.
- Jesus.
- God.
- Used as a title for a bishop.
- Used as a title for certain high officials and dignitaries.
- Used as a courtesy title for a younger son of a duke or marquis.
- Used as the usual style for a baron.
- Used as a form of address for a marquis, an earl, or a viscount.
- The general masculine title of nobility and other rank.
- The House of Lords.
- The proprietor of a manor.
- A territorial magnate.
- A king.
- A man of high rank in a feudal society or in one that retains feudal forms and institutions, especially.
- A person who has general authority over others
- Terms referring to the Judeo-Christian God
- A titled peer of the realm
FATHER vs LORD: VERB
- Make children
- Make a lord of someone
FATHER vs LORD: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To act or serve as a father.
- To attribute the paternity, creation, or origin of.
- To create, found, or originate.
- To act or serve as a father to (a child).
- To provide the sperm that unites with an egg to produce (an embryo, fetus, or child).
- To play the lord; to domineer; to rule with arbitrary or despotic sway; -- sometimes with over; and sometimes with it in the manner of a transitive verb.
- To rule over.
- To have a prominent or dominating position.
- To insist upon or boast about so as to act in a domineering or superior manner.
FATHER vs LORD: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To provide with a father.
- To take as one's own child; to adopt; hence, to assume as one's own work; to acknowledge one's self author of or responsible for (a statement, policy, etc.).
- To make one's self the father of; to beget.
- To rule or preside over as a lord.
- To invest with the dignity, power, and privileges of a lord.
FATHER vs LORD: OTHER WORD TYPES
- The best known Latin Church Fathers are Ambrose, Augustine, Gregory the Great, and Jerome
- In the Roman Catholic Church some were later declared saints and became Doctor of the Church
- Make (offspring) by reproduction
- To ascribe or charge to one as his offspring or production; fix the generation or authorship of: with on or upon.
- To give a father to; furnish with a father.
- To assume as one's own; profess or acknowledge one's self to be the owner or author of.
- To acknowledge or treat as a son or daughter; act as a father toward.
- To beget as a father; become the father or progenitor of.
- To play the lord; domineer; rule with arbitrary or despotic sway: sometimes followed by over, and sometimes by the indefinite it, with or without over.
- To rule or preside over as lord.
- To raise to the rank of a lord; hence, to treat, address, or acknowledge as lord or master.
- (idiom) (lord it over) To act in a domineering or superior manner toward.
FATHER vs LORD: RELATED WORDS
- Beginner, Male parent, Father god, Church father, Bring forth, Beget, Get, Sire, Founder, Founding father, Padre, Begetter, Forefather, Mother, Mother
- Gods, Heaven, Liege, Lordship, God, Creator, Master, Jehovah, Noble, Godhead, Divine, Nobleman, Almighty, God almighty, Overlord
FATHER vs LORD: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Engender, Beginner, Male parent, Church father, Bring forth, Beget, Get, Sire, Founder, Founding father, Padre, Begetter, Forefather, Mother, Mother
- Providence, Lordy, Heaven, Liege, Lordship, God, Master, Jehovah, Noble, Godhead, Divine, Nobleman, Almighty, God almighty, Overlord
FATHER vs LORD: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Show a picture representing the prodigal son and ask how the father in the story is like our Heavenly Father.
- Acknoledgement of Paternity, the legally presumed father can be replaced by the biological father on the birth certificate.
- Are there forms to disestablish the wrong father and establish the correct father at the same time?
- Even though the son rebels against his father, when he returns, broken and repentant, his father joyfully has mercy on him.
- Russian Father Christmas, is now considered to be her Grandfather rather than her father, as in the old story.
- First, my father led me from behind and I was riding on my father.
- But we will be getting the required amount as gift deeds from my father and father in law.
- Father, and that the Father is in me?
- League to the following: youngest father present, Brian Harper; oldest father present, Thedford Wood; and father with the most children present, Alan Price.
- Father Sullivan, Father Sharp, Father Downing, Sister Mary Elizabeth and Sister George!
- For You are my lamp, O Lord; the Lord shall enlighten my darkness.
- Lord, fore charyte, I ame an herpere of hethynes, Helpe me now, lord, yn this destres.
- The LORD will fulfill his purpose for me; your steadfast love, O LORD, endures forever.
- January of Lord Woolf, Lord Chief Justice, on mobile phone thefts, increased custody.
- The noble Lord, Lord Tunnicliffe, spoke about our position on Kashmir.
- Lord, Please come into my life and heal me Lord.
- Lord, I trust that you are Lord Jesus.
- The Lord gives and the Lord takes away; blessed be the name of the Lord.
- The LORD gave and the LORD has taken away; may the name of the LORD be praised.
- Shiva purana state, This mantra praises the two incarnations of Lord Vishnu namely Lord Krishna and Lord Ram.
FATHER vs LORD: QUESTIONS
- Who is the father of Microbiology and protozoology?
- Why is Durkheim considered the father of Sociology?
- What happened to father Kastner in 'the Conjuring'?
- Is Prince Andrew's father Lord Porchester the Queen's biological father?
- What do you say to your step father on father's day?
- Does Ellie know Morgan's father is not her biological father?
- Is Sean Astin's father really not his father after all?
- Who was the father of Samantha's Father on Bewitched?
- Why did Benita's father stare at her father blankly?
- What happened to Madeleine McCann's Father Father Pacheco?
- Will everyone who says'Lord Lord'enter the Kingdom of Heaven?
- Why is Lord Shiva called Mahadev and Lord Vishnu as devadeva?
- What happened to Lord Tariq from Lord and Peter's show?
- What is the nakshatra Lord and Rashi Lord of a planet?
- What did Lord Baltimore and Lord Cecil do for Maryland?
- What happened to Lord Furnival in Lord of the flies?
- How did Lord Krishna spare the life of Lord Kaliya?
- Why is Lord Shiva called the Lord of all creatures?
- Is Lord Kaal Bhairav a benevolent form of Lord Shiva?
- Why did Lord Vishnu gave Varanasi back to Lord Shiva?