heresy 英 [ˈherəsi]   美 [ˈhɛrɪsi]

heresy

heresy  英 [ˈherəsi] 美 [ˈhɛrɪsi]

n. 异端;异端邪说;异教 

名词复数:heresies 

To not do so was almost heresy. 不这样做的话,就是异教徒。
Ministers began to preach sermons against "Ephemera," and one, who too stoutly stood for much of its content, was expelled for heresy. 牧师们开始布道,反对《蜉蝣》,有一个牧师因为坚决维护那诗的内容,竟被以异端罪逐出了教会。

  • A heresy is a belief that doesn't agree with the official tenets of a particular religion; heresy is the maintaining of such contrary beliefs.
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  • n. 异端;异端邪说;异教
  • 1. To not do so was almost heresy.

    不这样做的话,就是异教徒。

  • 2. Ministers began to preach sermons against "Ephemera," and one, who too stoutly stood for much of its content, was expelled for heresy.

    牧师们开始布道,反对《蜉蝣》,有一个牧师因为坚决维护那诗的内容,竟被以异端罪逐出了教会。

  • heresy (n.) "doctrine or opinion at variance with established standards" (or, as Johnson defines it, "an opinion of private men different from that of the catholick and orthodox church"), c. 1200, from Old French heresie, eresie "heresy," and by extension "sodomy, immorality" (12c.), from Latin hæresis, "school of thought, philosophical sect." The Latin word is from Greek hairesis "a taking or choosing for oneself, a choice, a means of taking; a deliberate plan, purpose; philosophical sect, school," from haireisthai "take, seize," middle voice of hairein "to choose," a word of unknown origin, perhaps cognate with Hittite šaru "booty," Welsh herw "booty;" but Beekes offers "no etymology."
her·esy / ˈherəsi ; NAmE ˈherəsi / noun [uncountable ,  countable ] ( plural her·esies ) 1 a belief or an opinion that is against the principles of a particular religion; the fact of holding such beliefs 宗教异端;信奉邪说 He was burned at the stake for heresy. 他因为信奉异端思想而以火刑处死。 the heresies of the early Protestants 早期新教徒的异端邪说 collocationsat religion 2 a belief or an opinion that disagrees strongly with what most people believe 离经叛道的信念(或观点) The idea is heresy to most employees of the firm. 这种想法有悖于公司大多数员工的意见。 heresy heresies her·esy / ˈherəsi ; NAmE ˈherəsi /
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