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词汇 pope
释义

pope1

noun pəʊppoʊp
  • 1The Bishop of Rome as head of the Roman Catholic Church.

    (罗马天主教)教皇

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The return of the popes to Rome after their exile in Avignon in the second decade of the century probably encouraged a new internationalism, as Dufay's career in Rome and his relations with Florence, Ferrara, and Rimini show.
    • As such, it is also the cathedral church of the pope, who is the Bishop of Rome.
    • Following his visit to Sinai the pope returned to Rome.
    • The meeting shows the millennium-old spiritual closeness between the popes of Rome and your noble people.
    • As the successors of Peter in Rome, the popes laid claim to apostolic supremacy, just as Peter had been given primacy over the apostles in the mother community in Jerusalem after the Resurrection of Christ.
    • The Catholic Church has the pope and prominent bishops.
    • In another case, hundreds of people have complained to the BBC about a comic animation series about the pope and the Roman Catholic Church, due to be broadcast next year.
    • During his Rome visit, Teilhard had hoped to meet with the pope, Pius XII, but was unable to gain an audience.
    • The pope has led Roman Catholics worldwide for the past 26 years, the third-longest papacy in history.
    • Certainly the pope and the church's cardinals and bishops must correct the mistakes of the past.
    • From the 1400s some Iraqi Nestorians accepted overtures from Rome and acknowledged the pope, becoming Catholics.
    • Henry VIII was a Roman Catholic and the head of this church was the pope based in Rome.
    • That is the Catholic bishops, archbishops, papal nuncios, cardinals, popes.
    • From the 8th century its rulers were elected German kings, who usually sought, but did not always receive, imperial coronation by the popes in Rome.
    • The fact of the matter is that historiography correctly proves that the early popes of the Roman Catholic Church were of African descent.
    • The most powerful church leaders were the bishop of Rome, called the pope, in the West and the patriarch of Constantinople in the East.
    • From around the 15th century, a succession of ambitious popes ensured that Rome was graced with churches and public buildings which reflected their city's, and therefore their own, importance.
    • All the media focus on Rome when a new pope is elected distorts the nature of the church itself.
    • During the Great Schism from 1378 to 1417 one reason for Scotland's recognition of the Avignon popes was that the English were supporting the rival popes at Rome.
    • Expatriate artists and artisans, brought to Rome by provincial popes to celebrate their papacies in local styles, did not go home.
    Synonyms
    pontiff, sovereign/supreme pontiff, Bishop of Rome, Holy Father, Vicar of Christ, His Holiness
    1. 1.1 The head of the Coptic Church, the Bishop or Patriarch of Alexandria.
      (科普特教会的)教首;亚历山大主教(或牧首)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Coptic Patriarch of Alexandria is likewise designated by the non-biblical title of pope.
      • ‘The pope's attitude has provoked much unhappiness on the Coptic street,’ Ishaq said.
  • 2

    another term for ruffe

Phrases

  • is the Pope (a) Catholic?

    • informal Used to indicate that something is blatantly obvious.

      〈非正式〉教皇是天主教徒吗?;那可是显而易见的事

      Did he bet that day? Is the Pope Catholic?

      他那天赌博了吗?那还用说!

Derivatives

  • popedom

  • noun
    • In the days following Giblets's glorious conquest of popedom many have wailed in ceaseless abject horror.
  • popeless

  • adjective

Origin

Old English, via ecclesiastical Latin from ecclesiastical Greek papas 'bishop, patriarch', variant of Greek pappas 'father'.

  • The word pope came via ecclesiastical Latin from ecclesiastical Greek papas ‘bishop, patriarch’, a variant of Greek pappas ‘father’. From the same root came Late Middle English papal and papacy, and mid 16th-century papist. Patriarch (Middle English) is from Old French patriarche, via ecclesiastical Latin from Greek patriarkhēs: formed from patria ‘family’ and arkhēs ‘ruling’. Patriot (late 16th century) and patriotic (mid 17th century) go back to a related Greek patris ‘fatherland’. These are connected with English papa (late 17th century) for ‘father’ and mum, all being based on the early babbling sounds produced by infants, as is daddy (Late Middle English). See also pattern

Rhymes

aslope, cope, dope, elope, grope, hope, interlope, lope, mope, nope, ope, rope, scope, soap, taupe, tope, trope

pope2

noun pəʊppoʊp
  • A parish priest of the Orthodox Church in Russia and the Balkans.

    (俄罗斯和巴尔干地区东正教的)教区牧师

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Russian pop, from Old Church Slavonic popŭ.

pope1

nounpoʊppōp
  • 1usually the pope" or the "PopeThe Bishop of Rome as head of the Roman Catholic Church.

    (罗马天主教)教皇

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Following his visit to Sinai the pope returned to Rome.
    • The return of the popes to Rome after their exile in Avignon in the second decade of the century probably encouraged a new internationalism, as Dufay's career in Rome and his relations with Florence, Ferrara, and Rimini show.
    • As such, it is also the cathedral church of the pope, who is the Bishop of Rome.
    • The most powerful church leaders were the bishop of Rome, called the pope, in the West and the patriarch of Constantinople in the East.
    • That is the Catholic bishops, archbishops, papal nuncios, cardinals, popes.
    • The pope has led Roman Catholics worldwide for the past 26 years, the third-longest papacy in history.
    • During his Rome visit, Teilhard had hoped to meet with the pope, Pius XII, but was unable to gain an audience.
    • From around the 15th century, a succession of ambitious popes ensured that Rome was graced with churches and public buildings which reflected their city's, and therefore their own, importance.
    • The Catholic Church has the pope and prominent bishops.
    • Expatriate artists and artisans, brought to Rome by provincial popes to celebrate their papacies in local styles, did not go home.
    • The meeting shows the millennium-old spiritual closeness between the popes of Rome and your noble people.
    • The fact of the matter is that historiography correctly proves that the early popes of the Roman Catholic Church were of African descent.
    • From the 1400s some Iraqi Nestorians accepted overtures from Rome and acknowledged the pope, becoming Catholics.
    • All the media focus on Rome when a new pope is elected distorts the nature of the church itself.
    • During the Great Schism from 1378 to 1417 one reason for Scotland's recognition of the Avignon popes was that the English were supporting the rival popes at Rome.
    • Certainly the pope and the church's cardinals and bishops must correct the mistakes of the past.
    • As the successors of Peter in Rome, the popes laid claim to apostolic supremacy, just as Peter had been given primacy over the apostles in the mother community in Jerusalem after the Resurrection of Christ.
    • From the 8th century its rulers were elected German kings, who usually sought, but did not always receive, imperial coronation by the popes in Rome.
    • Henry VIII was a Roman Catholic and the head of this church was the pope based in Rome.
    • In another case, hundreds of people have complained to the BBC about a comic animation series about the pope and the Roman Catholic Church, due to be broadcast next year.
    Synonyms
    pontiff, sovereign pontiff, supreme pontiff, bishop of rome, holy father, vicar of christ, his holiness
    1. 1.1 The head of the Coptic Church, the Bishop or Patriarch of Alexandria.
      (科普特教会的)教首;亚历山大主教(或牧首)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • ‘The pope's attitude has provoked much unhappiness on the Coptic street,’ Ishaq said.
      • The Coptic Patriarch of Alexandria is likewise designated by the non-biblical title of pope.
  • 2

    another term for ruffe

Origin

Old English, via ecclesiastical Latin from ecclesiastical Greek papas ‘bishop, patriarch’, variant of Greek pappas ‘father’.

pope2

nounpoʊppōp
  • A parish priest of the Orthodox Church in Russia and the Balkans.

    (俄罗斯和巴尔干地区东正教的)教区牧师

Origin

Mid 17th century: from Russian pop, from Old Church Slavonic popŭ.

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