regionary

English

Etymology

From neo-Latin regionarius, referring to a deacon in charge of one of the seven wards of Rome, from Latin regiō + -ārius. Equivalent to region + -ary.

Adjective

regionary (not comparable)

  1. Of or pertaining to an ecclesiastical region.
    • 2013, Paul Erdkamp, The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Rome, page 175:
      Not surprisingly, the regionary magistrates do not appear very often in the historians: not every aedile turned out like Vespasian.

Noun

regionary (plural regionaries)

  1. (Christianity, historical) Synonym of regionarius (type of Roman Catholic ecclesiastic)
  2. (historical) A catalogue of monuments and buildings in ancient Rome, produced from a survey.
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