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consacrat

Consacrat is a rarely used coinage in English that may denote a person who has been consecrated for religious service or, less commonly, a person who performs a consecration. Because it is not part of standard religious vocabulary, its precise sense depends on context, author, and setting. In most ecclesiastical languages, the established terms are consecrated person, consecrator, or the act of consecration itself. Consacrat does not have a fixed definition in authoritative dictionaries.

Etymology for consacrat is not well established. The form appears to blend elements from consecrate or consecrator

Usage of the term is predominantly found in nonacademic or creative contexts. In scholarly or liturgical writing,

See also: consecration, consecrated person, consecrator, sacred rites.

with
a
nominal
ending
that
resembles
Latinized
coinages,
but
there
is
no
widely
accepted
derivation.
As
a
result,
its
historical
usage
is
limited
and
its
meaning
can
vary
across
texts.
it
is
generally
advisable
to
use
standard
terminology
such
as
consecrated
person
or
consecrator
to
avoid
ambiguity.
When
it
does
appear,
consacrat
is
often
in
fictional,
speculative,
or
experimental
religious
settings
where
authors
define
its
precise
sense
for
their
world-building.
If
introduced
in
a
text,
it
should
be
defined
on
first
use
to
prevent
misinterpretation.