officiate
21officiate — of·fi·ci·ate || É™ fɪʃɪeɪt v. perform ceremony; perform duty; serve as officiator; referee (Sports) …
22officiate — [ə fɪʃɪeɪt] verb 1》 act as an official. 2》 perform a religious service or ceremony. Derivatives officiation noun officiator noun Origin C17: from med. L. officiare perform divine service , from officium (see office) …
23officiate — v. n. Act, serve, perform …
24officiate — verb (intransitive + at) to do official duties, especially at a religious ceremony …
25officiate — verb 1) he officiated the game Syn: preside over, be in charge of, take charge of, direct, head (up); oversee, superintend, supervise, conduct, run; referee, umpire, judge, adjudicate; emcee 2) Fathe …
26officiate — v 1. perform or carry out the duties or functions, fulfill or discharge the responsibilities, exercise one s role, do the job; handle or transact business, look after or maintain affairs, carry on or forward; fill or serve in an office or a… …
27officiate — of·fi·ci·ate …
28officiate — of•fi•ci•ate [[t]əˈfɪʃ iˌeɪt[/t]] v. i. at•ed, at•ing 1) to perform the duties or function of some office or position 2) rel to perform the office of a cleric 3) to serve as referee, umpire, etc., in a contest or game • Etymology: 1625–35; <… …
29officiate — /əˈfɪʃieɪt / (say uh fisheeayt) verb (i) (officiated, officiating) 1. to perform the duties of any office or position. 2. to perform the office of a priest or minister, as at divine worship. {Medieval Latin officiātus, past participle of… …
30officiate — v.intr. 1 act in an official capacity, esp. on a particular occasion. 2 perform a divine service or ceremony. Derivatives: officiation n. officiator n. Etymology: med.L officiare perform a divine service (officium): see OFFICE …