Advanced or honorary academic degree in divinity.
A doctor's degree in religion.
Sinônimos
Examples for "d. d."
Examples for "d. d."
1But Sherman did the work ashore as D. D. Porter did afloat.
2Prof. W. P. Coddington, D. D., give the remedy their heartiest indorsement.
3By Thomas Birch, D. D. secretary to the Royal society, 2 vols.
4Elizur Goodrich, D. D., distinguished both as a clergyman and an astronomer.
5Walter H. Brooks, D. D., has a very unusual and interesting history.
1But do not forget that I am a doctor of divinity.
2I tried that plan on a doctor of divinity once, and it worked admirably.
3Beastly slow place, this, unless one is a deacon or a doctor of divinity.
4I don't resemble a hero any more than I do a doctor of divinity.
5You may imagine the effect this missive produced upon the proud, high-minded doctor of divinity.
6And yet a doctor of divinity tells me that this world was made of omnipotence.
7Sir, I am fifty-one years old, a master of arts and a doctor of divinity.
8If he is a doctor of divinity, add D.D.
9You argue, too, like a veritable doctor of divinity, said Dr. Stanley, with a smile.
10If a doctor of divinity, say The Rev.
11This Athanasius was a great doctor of divinity.
12He was treated with great deference, and appeared to me most like a doctor of divinity.
13He is a proud old doctor of divinity-notold, however-ofirreproachable family and large private fortune.
14The modern Dr. Busby is a doctor of medicine as well as a doctor of divinity.
15About the same time, Yale first conferred upon an Episcopal clergyman the title of doctor of divinity.
16S. B. Smith, a Catholic doctor of divinity, explains in his "Elements of Ecclesiastical Law":
Translations for doctor of divinity