Adjective
our reverend elders should be accorded a special place of honor at the ceremonies Noun
called their reverend and asked if he could marry them next June
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Adjective
There before the reverend mother and God, the police (wielding rifles) and the butchers (wielding a cow trailer) managed to corral two of the steers.—
Ian Bogost,
The Atlantic,
13 Mar. 2022 There’s a little commentary around the reverend character [played by Chris Evans] and the kind of cultlike world that exists there, which is a little Trump-like, but not so much.—
Kevin Cassidy,
HollywoodReporter,
3 Sep. 2019
Noun
The reverend stands tall at the pulpit and reads from the Gospel of Matthew.—
Jonathan Bullington,
Chicago Tribune,
26 Apr. 2026 To the people around me, Jackson—the reverend and civil-rights leader—was a hero.—
Adam Serwer,
The Atlantic,
17 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for reverend
Word History
Etymology
Adjective
Middle English, borrowed from Anglo-French, borrowed from Latin reverendus, gerundive of reverērī "to stand in awe of, revere entry 1"