legate

A deputy representing the pope, specifically a papal ambassador sent on special ecclesiastical missions.

Noun

  1. A deputy representing the pope, specifically a papal ambassador sent on special ecclesiastical missions.
  2. An ambassador or messenger.
    • Moſt great and puiſant Monarke of the earth, Your Baſſoe wil accompliſh your beheſt: And ſhew your pleaſure to the Perſean, As fits the Legate of the ſtately Turke. - c. 1587–1588 (date written), [Christopher Marlowe],...
    • The dark figure on the raised white terrace; legate of the sun facing the sun; the most ancient royal power. - 1965, John Fowles, The Magus:
  3. The deputy of a provincial governor or general in ancient Rome.
    • Legate, I had the news last night—my cohort ordered home By ships to Portus Itius and thence by road to Rome. - 1911, Rudyard Kipling, “The Roman Centurion’s Song”, in The History of England:

Origin

Inherited from Old English legat(e), from Old French legat, from Latin lēgātus, substantivized from the perfect passive participle of lēgō (“to bequeath, send as envoy”).

Forms

legates

Related

legacy legatine legation prolegate

Derived

legatee legateship

Noun obsolete

  1. A legacy or bequest.

Origin

Borrowed from Latin lēgātum (“a legacy”), substantivized from the neuter forms of the perfect passive participle of lēgō (“to bequeath, leave as legacy, legate”). Doublet of legacy.

Forms

legates

Verb

  1. To leave as a legacy.
  2. past participle of legate

Origin

Borrowed from Latin lēgātus, perfect passive participle of lēgō (“to bequeath, leave as legacy, legate”), see -ate (verb-forming suffix) and -ate (adjective-forming suffix).

Forms

legates legating legated