curate

ക്യുറേറ്റുചെയ്യാനാകും
definition
verb
both exhibitions are curated by the museum's director
select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition).
noun
But in a letter to the village magazine, the assistant curate said the work on the windows had used up the funds available for repairs to the church.
a member of the clergy engaged as assistant to a vicar, rector, or parish priest.
example
A very warm welcome is extended to the new 'curate' for Rathdowney parish.
After his studies he returned to Galway Diocese and was appointed a 'curate' in Salthill.
Two years later he went to England and became a 'curate' .
A former baseball player has been appointed an assistant 'curate' .
He has now been appointed a diocesan 'curate' in Allen, County Kildare.
A campaign has begun in earnest to persuade The Vatican to declare a former 'curate' of Clonmore Parish Holy.
nearly every major news organization is using Twitter’s new lists feature to 'curate' tweets about the earthquake
In a hard-hitting sermon, the young 'curate' hit out at a lack of parental responsibility in regard to children.
Since 1994 he has served as 'curate' in our parish living in Kiltegan village.
Two years later a meretricious 'curate' pulled them down from the shelf and bought them.
The local 'curate' expressed understanding at their sense of loss.
Two years ago, he was appointed parish 'curate' completing a total of nine years in Tullow.
We take this opportunity to welcome our new 'curate' .
An overawed young 'curate' is having tea with his vicar.
Keeping on the religious track, I must admit I found this link on an Anglican 'curate' 's blog.
He has 'curated' exhibitions on 20 th-century British artists and the decorative arts.
In 1976 he became 'assistant curate' at Cheam in Surrey and after five years became head of religious studies and chaplain at Radley College in Oxford.
It is a brilliantly 'curated' exhibition that you can view at home because it's in a book.
A number of displays were carefully 'curated' , scholarly exhibitions.
We're not interested in raw numbers, but ensuring that our valued customers enjoy and appreciate the 'curated' news and the eloquent writers whom we employ, etc. etc.
In 'curating' the exhibition, she took a very hands-off approach, beyond providing the artists the opportunity to resolve new ideas in a public setting.
The exhibition has been 'curated' to fit a number of different thematic topics, which, it is understood, must be seen chronologically.
Some of her visual material comes from the architects but much is her own, shot as she buzzes around the world 'curating' exhibitions.
Canadian material, coming from about 350 localities, is housed temporarily at Iowa before its eventual permanent 'curation' with the Geological Survey of Canada.
Blueprint is making one of the only serious efforts at collecting, carefully 'curating' and providing information to scientists that would not otherwise be made available in a computer-readable format.
She continues writing articles, and 'curating' exhibitions in the tradition of experimental art.
But in a letter to the village magazine, the 'assistant curate' said the work on the windows had used up the funds available for repairs to the church.
Over the past decade, my father has been slowly 'curating' a collection of AIDS posters from all over the world, for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda.
Before joining Holy Rood he was 'assistant curate' at St George's Church in Tyldesley.
He has had ten years of museum experience 'curating' exhibitions, commissioning new works, and developing artist residency programs.
Credits: Google Translate