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Andrei Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

As a bishop or as bishop

The Anglican Church has urged US church leaders to apologise for ordaining a gay priest as bishop.

The call was made by the Lambeth Commission, set up after the ordination of Gene Robinson threatened to split the worldwide Anglican church.

Commission chairman Irish Anglican leader Robin Eames concluded: "There remains a very real danger that we will not choose to walk together."

The report called for a moratorium on the consecration of gay candidates.

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In the first sentence, you will read the words 'ordaining a gay priests as bishop'. Shouldn't it be 'ordaining a gay priests as a bishop' ?
  

Top answer

Either way is OK. 'As a bishop' means as one member of that hierarchy; 'as bishop' means as that title. 'Mr.

  • Either way is OK.
  • 'As a bishop' means as one member of that hierarchy; 'as bishop' means as that title.
  • 'Mr.
  • '
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3 Answers
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Either way is OK. 'As a bishop' means as one member of that hierarchy; 'as bishop' means as that title. 'Mr. Kerry may be elected President.'
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Hello Andrei

There's a 3rd, article-less construction:

'He was ordained bishop last month.'

This form is often used in ecclesiastical announcements.

MrP
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Verbs with predicative compliments.

A: X -without the article - role - the role / title / occupation of X

1) bishop
2) as bishop
3) to be bishop

B: an X - with the article - individual - a person who is an X ; a person who is one of any number of X's

1) a bishop
2) as a bishop
3) to be a bishop

When the noun can be consider

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