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English Dictionary: magistrate by the DICT Development Group
3 results for magistrate
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
magistrate
n
  1. a lay judge or civil authority who administers the law (especially one who conducts a court dealing with minor offenses)
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Magistrate \Mag"is*trate\, n. [L. magistratus, fr. magister
      master: cf. F. magistrat. See {Master}.]
      A person clothed with power as a public civil officer; a
      public civil officer invested with the executive government,
      or some branch of it. [bd]All Christian rulers and
      magistrates.[b8] --Book of Com. Prayer.
  
               Of magistrates some also are supreme, in whom the
               sovereign power of the state resides; others are
               subordinate.                                          --Blackstone.

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Magistrate
      a public civil officer invested with authority. The Hebrew
      shophetim, or judges, were magistrates having authority in the
      land (Deut. 1:16, 17). In Judg. 18:7 the word "magistrate"
      (A.V.) is rendered in the Revised Version "possessing
      authority", i.e., having power to do them harm by invasion. In
      the time of Ezra (9:2) and Nehemiah (2:16; 4:14; 13:11) the
      Jewish magistrates were called _seganim_, properly meaning
      "nobles." In the New Testament the Greek word _archon_, rendered
      "magistrate" (Luke 12:58; Titus 3:1), means one first in power,
      and hence a prince, as in Matt. 20:25, 1 Cor. 2:6, 8. This term
      is used of the Messiah, "Prince of the kings of the earth" (Rev.
      1:5). In Acts 16:20, 22, 35, 36, 38, the Greek term _strategos_,
      rendered "magistrate," properly signifies the leader of an army,
      a general, one having military authority. The _strategoi_ were
      the duumviri, the two praetors appointed to preside over the
      administration of justice in the colonies of the Romans. They
      were attended by the sergeants (properly lictors or "rod
      bearers").
     
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