释义 |
Definition of sacralize in English: sacralize(British sacralise) verb ˈseɪkrəlʌɪzˈsakrəˌlīz [with object]North American Imbue with or treat as having a sacred character or quality. 〈主美〉使神圣化 rural images that sacralize country life 把乡村生活神圣化的乡村形象。 Example sentencesExamples - Moreover, he effectively sacralized the establishment, and the nation, through his understanding of national and ecclesial authorities as interlinked dimensions of the divine order.
- It sacralized the traditional order of things and situated history, society, and politics in the transcendent, and thus seems quintessentially premodern.
- Invoking the deaths of the father and the artist sacralizes the artistic enterprise, encouraging the work's celebration while shielding it from political and economic critique.
- The task of spirituality is to recover these fundamental conditions of our pilgrimage (a metaphor that he uses extensively) by sacralizing them and restoring their meaning.
- They were directed at sacralizing the figure of the prince.
- In the 1870s, and even more in the 1880s and 1890s, the need to sacralize politics and squeeze out the rival religions of Catholicism and socialism was keenly felt by many within Italy's ruling elite.
- He takes effective aim at those who sacralize the genome, or claim a ‘right’ to an unaltered genome, or base opposition to particular practices on intuitive feelings of repugnance or on undefended claims about what it means to be human.
- But let people who believe in religion say, ‘We're not going to sacralise it, we're not going to make it sacred, we're not going to endorse it by saying it's a work of God; killing is killing.’
- Alternative ideology becomes a means of imbuing both self and community with an element of the mythic, and validating perceived limitations and shortcomings while sacralizing the mundane.
- How did we manage to sacralise this tenet in under a decade?
- Societies also have sacralized their histories in order to create the illusion that they, too, can transcend the passage of time.
- Klassen discusses how the choice of the home simultaneously sacralizes the home as a space in which a deeply spiritual event can occur and challenges the hegemony of the medical paradigm which sees the home as a source of pathogens.
- The nostalgic gaze sacralizes concepts, objects, forms, and states from the past and reproduces them in a present that simulates and commodifies their pastness.
- Some rituals involved enacting ancient myths from a feminist point of view, revering nature, and sacralizing women's bodies.
- They demonstrate that ConFest is differentially sacralised - that which is authentic or sacred to one group or individual may be profane or inauthentic to another.
- Religion has a place in this scheme but only ‘in functionalist terms as legitimating and sacralizing the common conventions and social unity.’
- In it, the cosmic struggle of good and evil is played out in day-to-day objects and events; through it, the world is sacralised.
- Sacred places are not revealed, made holy by an indwelling power; rather, certain spaces are sacralized by the ‘cultural labor of ritual’.
- In ‘Blood Money’, Damon W. Root shows that America's most sacralized battlefield, Gettysburg, has always been its most commercialized; he also explains why that's a good thing.
- Where a family retains a connection with an ancestral ‘saint,’ the annual festival of this saint serves as a family reunion, and sacralizes the group, meaning those descended in the male line from the ancestor.
Derivativesnoun North American It was a development that brought the sacralization of culture as a secular substitute for revealed religion, expressed visually in the creation of temple-like museums, art galleries, theatres, opera houses, and concert halls. Example sentencesExamples - But to dismiss such phenomena as simply trivial or amusing is to underestimate the importance of the sacralisation of everyday life and personal experience in the religious lives of individuals.
- Some writers have identified this as the sacralization of violence; but without requiring mysticism we can see that terrorist logic clearly rests on a symbolic conception of sociopolitical power relations.
- The long intergroup conflict over the land itself has led to the sacralization of many sites that are well remembered and frequently visited by a great many South Africans of all backgrounds.
- In keeping with the general sacralization of politics during the Reformation, the council's overall role and its relationship with the city's inhabitants were defined in religious terms.
Definition of sacralize in US English: sacralize(British sacralise) verbˈsakrəˌlīz [with object]North American Imbue with or treat as having a sacred character or quality. 〈主美〉使神圣化 rural images that sacralize country life 把乡村生活神圣化的乡村形象。 Example sentencesExamples - How did we manage to sacralise this tenet in under a decade?
- But let people who believe in religion say, ‘We're not going to sacralise it, we're not going to make it sacred, we're not going to endorse it by saying it's a work of God; killing is killing.’
- Religion has a place in this scheme but only ‘in functionalist terms as legitimating and sacralizing the common conventions and social unity.’
- Klassen discusses how the choice of the home simultaneously sacralizes the home as a space in which a deeply spiritual event can occur and challenges the hegemony of the medical paradigm which sees the home as a source of pathogens.
- They were directed at sacralizing the figure of the prince.
- Some rituals involved enacting ancient myths from a feminist point of view, revering nature, and sacralizing women's bodies.
- Invoking the deaths of the father and the artist sacralizes the artistic enterprise, encouraging the work's celebration while shielding it from political and economic critique.
- In it, the cosmic struggle of good and evil is played out in day-to-day objects and events; through it, the world is sacralised.
- The nostalgic gaze sacralizes concepts, objects, forms, and states from the past and reproduces them in a present that simulates and commodifies their pastness.
- Alternative ideology becomes a means of imbuing both self and community with an element of the mythic, and validating perceived limitations and shortcomings while sacralizing the mundane.
- It sacralized the traditional order of things and situated history, society, and politics in the transcendent, and thus seems quintessentially premodern.
- In the 1870s, and even more in the 1880s and 1890s, the need to sacralize politics and squeeze out the rival religions of Catholicism and socialism was keenly felt by many within Italy's ruling elite.
- Sacred places are not revealed, made holy by an indwelling power; rather, certain spaces are sacralized by the ‘cultural labor of ritual’.
- They demonstrate that ConFest is differentially sacralised - that which is authentic or sacred to one group or individual may be profane or inauthentic to another.
- The task of spirituality is to recover these fundamental conditions of our pilgrimage (a metaphor that he uses extensively) by sacralizing them and restoring their meaning.
- Where a family retains a connection with an ancestral ‘saint,’ the annual festival of this saint serves as a family reunion, and sacralizes the group, meaning those descended in the male line from the ancestor.
- Moreover, he effectively sacralized the establishment, and the nation, through his understanding of national and ecclesial authorities as interlinked dimensions of the divine order.
- He takes effective aim at those who sacralize the genome, or claim a ‘right’ to an unaltered genome, or base opposition to particular practices on intuitive feelings of repugnance or on undefended claims about what it means to be human.
- Societies also have sacralized their histories in order to create the illusion that they, too, can transcend the passage of time.
- In ‘Blood Money’, Damon W. Root shows that America's most sacralized battlefield, Gettysburg, has always been its most commercialized; he also explains why that's a good thing.
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