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Word Meanings - VISITATORIAL - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Of or pertaining to visitation, or a judicial visitor or superintendent; visitorial. An archdeacon has visitatorial power. Ayliffe. The queen, however, still had over the church a visitatorial power of vast and undefined extent. Macaulay.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of VISITATORIAL)

Related words: (words related to VISITATORIAL)

  • PENAL
    Of or pertaining to punishment, to penalties, or to crimes and offenses; pertaining to criminal jurisprudence: as: Enacting or threatening punishment; as, a penal statue; the penal code. Incurring punishment; subject to a penalty; as, a penalact
  • COERCIVE
    Serving or intended to coerce; having power to constrain. -- Co*er"cive*ly, adv. -- Co*er"cive*ness, n. Coercive power can only influence us to outward practice. Bp. Warburton. Coercive or Coercitive force , the power or force which in iron or
  • PENALITY
    The quality or state of being penal; lability to punishment. Sir T. Browne.
  • RETRIBUTIVE; RETRIBUTORY
    Of or pertaining to retribution; of the nature of retribution; involving retribution or repayment; as, retributive justice; retributory comforts.
  • PUNITIVE
    Of or pertaining to punishment; involving, awarding, or inflicting punishment; as, punitive law or justice. If death be punitive, so, likewise, is the necessity imposed upon man of toiling for his subsistence. I. Taylor. We shall dread a blow from
  • CASTIGATORY
    Punitive in order to amendment; corrective.
  • VISITATORIAL
    Of or pertaining to visitation, or a judicial visitor or superintendent; visitorial. An archdeacon has visitatorial power. Ayliffe. The queen, however, still had over the church a visitatorial power of vast and undefined extent. Macaulay.
  • PENALLY
    In a penal manner.
  • PENALIZE
    To put a penalty on. See Penalty, 3. (more info) 1. To make penal.
  • INFLICTIVE
    Causing infliction; acting as an infliction. Whitehead.
  • PENALTY
    1. Penal retribution; punishment for crime or offense; the suffering in person or property which is annexed by law or judicial decision to the commission of a crime, offense, or trespass. Death is the penalty imposed. Milton. 2. The suffering,
  • CORRECTIVE
    1. Having the power to correct; tending to rectify; as, corrective penalties. Mulberries are pectoral, corrective of billious alkali. Arbuthnot. 2. Qualifying; limiting. "The Psalmist interposeth . . . this corrective particle." Holdsworth.

 

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