ecclesiastic 英 [ɪˌkli:ziˈæstɪk]   美 [ɪˌkliziˈæstɪk]

ecclesiastic

ecclesiastic  英 [ɪˌkli:ziˈæstɪk] 美 [ɪˌkliziˈæstɪk]

n. 神职人员;牧师;教会  adj. 教会的;神职者的;牧师的 

名词复数:ecclesiastics 

The man and the ecclesiastic fought within him, and the victory fell to the man. 人和教士在他的心里交战,结果人取得了胜利。
There is, however, one side of life to which he is entirely blind, as was perhaps natural in an ecclesiastic writing before the Age of Salons. 有一个生活层面他是完全一无所知的,这也难怪,要知道在沙龙时代之前所有神职作品都从来没有提及过。

  • If you’re an ecclesiastic, you probably spend a lot of time in church. The word ecclesiastic describes a member of the clergy, typically someone associated with a Christian church.
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  • n. 神职人员;牧师;教会
  • adj. 教会的;神职者的;牧师的
  • 1. The man and the ecclesiastic fought within him, and the victory fell to the man.

    人和教士在他的心里交战,结果人取得了胜利。

  • 2. There is, however, one side of life to which he is entirely blind, as was perhaps natural in an ecclesiastic writing before the Age of Salons.

    有一个生活层面他是完全一无所知的,这也难怪,要知道在沙龙时代之前所有神职作品都从来没有提及过。

  • 3. Beethoven was extremely influential as among the first composers to work freelance rather than being employed full-time by a royal or ecclesiastic patron.

    贝多芬作为并非全职供职于皇家和教会赞助人,而作为自由职业者的首位作曲家而极具影响力。

  • ecclesiastic (adj.) late 15c., from Middle French ecclésiastique and directly from Late Latin ecclesiasticus, from Greek ekklesiastikos "of the (ancient Athenian) assembly," in late Greek, "of the church," from ekklesiastes "speaker in an assembly or church, preacher," from ekkalein "to call out," from ek "out" (see ex-) + kalein "to call" (from PIE root *kele- (2) "to shout"). As a noun, "one holding an office in the Christian ministry," 1650s; it also was used as a noun in Late Latin.
ec·cle·si·as·tic / ɪˌkliːziˈæstɪk ; NAmE ɪˌkliːziˈæstɪk / noun ( formal) a priest or minister in the Christian Church (基督教)教士,圣职人员 ecclesiastic ecclesiastics ec·cle·si·as·tic / ɪˌkliːziˈæstɪk ; NAmE ɪˌkliːziˈæstɪk /
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