- magisterial
- magisterial adj. Perteneciente o relativo al magisterio.
Diccionario de la lengua española. 2015.
Diccionario de la lengua española. 2015.
Magisterial — Mag is*te ri*al, a. [L. magisterius magisterial. See {Master}.] 1. Of or pertaining to a master or magistrate, or one in authority; having the manner of a magister; official; commanding; authoritative. Hence: Overbearing; dictatorial; dogmatic.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
magisterial — index dogmatic, insolent, juridical, official, powerful, presumptuous, supercilious Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton … Law dictionary
magisterial — (adj.) 1630s, from M.L. magisterialis of or pertaining to the office of magistrate, director, or teacher, from L.L. magisterius having authority of a magistrate, from magister chief, director (see MASTER (Cf. master) (n.)). Related: Magisterially … Etymology dictionary
magisterial — authoritarian, *dictatorial, dogmatic, doctrinaire, oracular Analogous words: *masterful, domineering, imperious, imperative, peremptory: directing, controlling, conducting, managing (see CONDUCT vb) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
magisterial — ► ADJECTIVE 1) very authoritative. 2) domineering; dictatorial. 3) relating to a magistrate. DERIVATIVES magisterially adverb. ORIGIN from Latin magister master … English terms dictionary
magisterial — [maj΄is tir′ē əl] adj. [ML magisterialis < LL magisterius < L magister, a MASTER] 1. of or suitable for a magistrate or master 2. showing or having the skill or knowledge of a master; expert 3. authoritative; official 4. domineering;… … English World dictionary
magisterial — adjective 1 a magisterial way of behaving or speaking shows that you think you have authority: his magisterial voice 2 a magisterial book is written by someone who has very great knowledge about a subject: his magisterial study of the First World … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
magisterial — magisterially, adv. magisterialness, n. /maj euh stear ee euhl/, adj. 1. of, pertaining to, or befitting a master; authoritative; weighty; of importance or consequence: a magisterial pronouncement by the director of the board. 2. imperious;… … Universalium
magisterial — ma|gis|te|ri|al [ˌmædʒıˈstıəriəl US ˈstır ] adj [Date: 1600 1700; : Late Latin; Origin: magisterialis, from Latin magister; MAGISTRATE] 1.) a magisterial way of behaving or speaking shows that you think you have authority ▪ his magisterial voice… … Dictionary of contemporary English
magisterial — [[t]mæ̱ʤɪstɪ͟əri(ə)l[/t]] ADJ GRADED: usu ADJ n If you describe someone s behaviour or work as magisterial, you mean that they show great authority or ability. [FORMAL] ...his magisterial voice and bearing... The Cambridge World History of Human… … English dictionary