ordain
ordain 英 [ɔ:ˈdeɪn] 美 [ɔrˈdeɪn]
vt. 任命某人为牧师;授某人以圣职;(上帝、法律等)命令;注定 vi. 颁布命令
进行时:ordaining 过去式:ordained 过去分词:ordained 第三人称单数:ordains 名词复数:ordains
- To ordain is to make someone a minister, priest, monk, or other member of the clergy. In the Catholic church, for example, a bishop ordains new priests.
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- vt. 任命某人为牧师;授某人以圣职;(上帝、法律等)命令;注定
- vi. 颁布命令
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1. And so ordain I in all churches.
我吩咐各教会都是这样。
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2. Do for Aaron and his sons everything I have commanded you, taking seven days to ordain them.
你要这样照我一切所吩咐的,向亚伦和他儿子行承接圣职的礼七天。
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3. She tried to get ordained but, because she was a female, nobody would ordain her.
她试着去成为一名拉比,但是因为她是一个女人,所以没有人认可她。
- ordain (v.) late 13c., "to appoint or admit to the ministry of the Church," from stem of Old French ordener "place in order, arrange, prepare; consecrate, designate" (Modern French ordonner) and directly from Latin ordinare "put in order, arrange, dispose, appoint," from ordo (genitive ordinis) "row, rank, series, arrangement" (see order (n.)). The notion is "to confer holy orders upon." Meaning "to decree, enact" is from c. 1300; sense of "to set (something) that will continue in a certain order" is from early 14c. Related: Ordained; ordaining.
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