0 present participle of officiate --
1 to be in charge of or to lead a ceremony or other public event: --
The arrangements at this and other centres are that accommodation for religious services at the centres and transport for officiating ministers are provided free at appropriatee times.
It must be supported by wider discretion being given to those who are officiating in the polling station.
This is a matter which really must be cleared up, because you will see that it puts officiating chaplains in an exceedingly difficult position.
Temporary promotion in such appointments, both officiating and substantive, is given as vacancies occur, and, when given, carries an increase of emoluments.
Is not that a further example of the extraordinary way in which officialdom seems to know better than the people for whom it is officiating?
Fees for marriages and funerals—they are not charged for baptisms—are paid to the officiating minister and the parochial church council, not to the commissioners.
As regards the question about supervision, the immediate supervision of the officiating clergy rests with the superintendents of the hospitals concerned.
The driver who'd been drinking was officiating priest.