Layover
[ley-oh-ver] /ˈleɪˌoʊ vər/
noun
1.
.
n.
also lay-over, “a stop overnight,” 1873, from lay (v.) + over. Earlier as “a cloth laid over a table-cloth” (1777).
Read Also:
- Laypeople
[ley-pee-puh l] /ˈleɪˌpi pəl/ plural noun 1. laymen and laywomen collectively. [ley-pur-suh n] /ˈleɪˌpɜr sən/ noun 1. a person who is not a member of the clergy; one of the laity. 2. a person who is not a member of a given profession, as law or medicine. n. 1972, gender-neutral version of layman.
- Lay-people
[ley-pee-puh l] /ˈleɪˌpi pəl/ plural noun 1. laymen and laywomen collectively. [ley-pur-suh n] /ˈleɪˌpɜr sən/ noun 1. a person who is not a member of the clergy; one of the laity. 2. a person who is not a member of a given profession, as law or medicine. n. 1972, gender-neutral version of layman.
- Layperson
[ley-pur-suh n] /ˈleɪˌpɜr sən/ noun 1. a person who is not a member of the clergy; one of the laity. 2. a person who is not a member of a given profession, as law or medicine. [ley-pee-puh l] /ˈleɪˌpi pəl/ plural noun 1. laymen and laywomen collectively. n. 1972, gender-neutral version of layman.
- Lay pipe
verb phrase
- Lay-reader
noun, Anglican Church. 1. a layperson authorized by a bishop to conduct certain parts of a service. noun 1. (Church of England) a person licensed by a bishop to conduct religious services other than the Eucharist 2. (RC Church) a layman chosen from among the congregation to read the epistle at Mass and sometimes other […]