释义 |
Definition of papist in English: papistnoun ˈpeɪpɪstˈpeɪpɪst derogatory 1A Roman Catholic. 天主教徒 Example sentencesExamples - Pym delivered a hard-line speech denouncing the king's trade embargo and playing the religion card: the king's armies, he alleged, were riddled with papists.
- Priests and nuns were known to kidnap Baptists and force them to become papists.
- She is the only child in a family that has been papist since the days of Saint Patrick.
- In November of that year the newly appointed Anglican Archbishop of Armagh, James Ussher, and his suffragan bishops issued a statement declaring that the ‘religion of papists is superstitious and idolatrous erroneous and heretical.’
- Past historians evaluated him either as a secret papist who corrupted the church or as the martyr of true Anglicanism.
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another term for papalist Example sentencesExamples - He acknowledged that some would accuse him of being a papist who wanted to introduce Roman Catholicism into the diocese because of his support of Sellon and her orphanage.
adjective ˈpeɪpɪstˈpeɪpɪst derogatory Relating to or associated with the Roman Catholic Church. (与)天主教(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - These catholic or papist communities survived and developed by resistance to legal proscription by penal laws, eventually lifted in the late 18th and early 19th cents.
- This movie was made by a devoted Roman Catholic with the advice of papist theologians, and is endorsed by Pope John Paul II.
- But, in spite of the labours of the past 50 years by Evangelicals, Mexico is still a country ‘more papist than the pope’.
- The play deals, in effect, with prejudicial notions about papist belief, and Calvinist critiques of that belief system, mediated and popularised into commonly held views that would find natural assent from a contemporary audience.
Derivativesnoun ˈpeɪpɪz(ə)mˈpeɪˌpɪzəm derogatory Many Protestants died of the fevers because of their objection to taking a drug associated with papism - Oliver Cromwell is thought to have been amongst them. Example sentencesExamples - Dunbar balanced his apparently cavalier attitude towards the Kirk by occasionally cracking down on papism, a proven means of garnering positive public opinion without risking controversy.
- Christ is constantly being "corrected" in Papism and has largely been replaced by the Bible amongst the Protestants; in both cases, the Incarnate Logos (Word) is replaced by scholasticism (separation of intellect from life) and heresy.
adjective pəˈpɪstɪk(ə)lpəˈpɪstək(ə)l derogatory Relating to or associated with the Roman Catholic Church. (与)天主教(有关)的 the papistical doctrine of transubstantiation Example sentencesExamples - Latimer favoured the annulment of Henry VIII's marriage to Catherine and despite his overt opposition to papistical falsehoods he gained the King's favour while in London and was made a royal chaplain.
- To the Mayor he affirmed his loyalty to Queen Mary, but insisted that he rejected ‘the wicked papistical religion of the Bishop of Rome’.
noun ˈpeɪpɪstriˈpeɪpɪstri derogatory Catholics also had to endure the hatred of ‘papistry’ that dominated a culture where Englishness and Protestantism were two sides of a single coin. Example sentencesExamples - In this Reformation moment, the poetic figuration of Catholic ideas and practices in Petrarchan discourse was often read as a conservative or reactionary reiteration of Catholicism and/or idolatrous ‘papistry.’
OriginMid 16th century: from French papiste or modern Latin papista, from ecclesiastical Latin papa 'bishop (of Rome)'. Definition of papist in US English: papistnounˈpeɪpɪstˈpāpist derogatory 1A Roman Catholic. 天主教徒 Example sentencesExamples - Pym delivered a hard-line speech denouncing the king's trade embargo and playing the religion card: the king's armies, he alleged, were riddled with papists.
- She is the only child in a family that has been papist since the days of Saint Patrick.
- Priests and nuns were known to kidnap Baptists and force them to become papists.
- In November of that year the newly appointed Anglican Archbishop of Armagh, James Ussher, and his suffragan bishops issued a statement declaring that the ‘religion of papists is superstitious and idolatrous erroneous and heretical.’
- Past historians evaluated him either as a secret papist who corrupted the church or as the martyr of true Anglicanism.
- 1.1
another term for papalist Example sentencesExamples - He acknowledged that some would accuse him of being a papist who wanted to introduce Roman Catholicism into the diocese because of his support of Sellon and her orphanage.
adjectiveˈpeɪpɪstˈpāpist derogatory Relating to or associated with the Roman Catholic Church. (与)天主教(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - The play deals, in effect, with prejudicial notions about papist belief, and Calvinist critiques of that belief system, mediated and popularised into commonly held views that would find natural assent from a contemporary audience.
- These catholic or papist communities survived and developed by resistance to legal proscription by penal laws, eventually lifted in the late 18th and early 19th cents.
- But, in spite of the labours of the past 50 years by Evangelicals, Mexico is still a country ‘more papist than the pope’.
- This movie was made by a devoted Roman Catholic with the advice of papist theologians, and is endorsed by Pope John Paul II.
OriginMid 16th century: from French papiste or modern Latin papista, from ecclesiastical Latin papa ‘bishop (of Rome)’. |