释义 |
Definition of janissary in English: janissary(also janizary) nounPlural janissariesˈdʒanɪs(ə)riˈdʒænəˌsɛri historical 1A member of the Turkish infantry forming the Sultan's guard between the 14th and 19th centuries. 〈史〉(14至19世纪土耳其苏丹的)禁卫军士兵 Example sentencesExamples - In 1801 janissaries in league with Pasvanoglu seized Belgrade and the terror that followed provoked a rising of Serbs in February 1804 led by Karageorge, a cattle merchant who had seen service in the Habsburg armies.
- By 1800, everybody was a janissary, as the corps was swollen to as many as 400,000 names, based on corrupt and marketable muster rolls, which supported a process of gentrification of the janissary families.
- The soldiers formed the celebrated corps of the janissaries (Turkish Yeni cheri, ‘new troops’) These infantrymen took to the use of handguns in the form of arquebuses and, later, the more manageable early forms of musket.
- An estimated 100,000 Slovenians perished and an equal number of young boys and girls were taken to Turkey where boys were trained as Turkish soldiers (janizaries) and the girls were put into harems.
- 1.1 A devoted follower or supporter.
忠实的追随者(或支持者) Example sentencesExamples - By supplementing and supporting Western militarism around the globe, third world peacekeepers serve as the West's janissaries for the post-Cold War world.
- Tony Blair has had no such confrontation, largely because his government accedes to almost every demand from big business and its janissaries.
Synonyms supporter, follower, adherent, devotee, champion, backer, upholder, promoter, fanatic, fan, enthusiast, stalwart, zealot, disciple, votary
OriginEarly 16th century: from French janissaire, based on Turkish yeniçeri, from yeni 'new' + çeri 'troops'. Definition of janissary in US English: janissary(also janizary) nounˈdʒænəˌsɛriˈjanəˌserē historical 1A member of the Turkish infantry forming the Sultan's guard between the 14th and 19th centuries. 〈史〉(14至19世纪土耳其苏丹的)禁卫军士兵 Example sentencesExamples - By 1800, everybody was a janissary, as the corps was swollen to as many as 400,000 names, based on corrupt and marketable muster rolls, which supported a process of gentrification of the janissary families.
- The soldiers formed the celebrated corps of the janissaries (Turkish Yeni cheri, ‘new troops’) These infantrymen took to the use of handguns in the form of arquebuses and, later, the more manageable early forms of musket.
- An estimated 100,000 Slovenians perished and an equal number of young boys and girls were taken to Turkey where boys were trained as Turkish soldiers (janizaries) and the girls were put into harems.
- In 1801 janissaries in league with Pasvanoglu seized Belgrade and the terror that followed provoked a rising of Serbs in February 1804 led by Karageorge, a cattle merchant who had seen service in the Habsburg armies.
- 1.1 A devoted follower or supporter.
忠实的追随者(或支持者) Example sentencesExamples - By supplementing and supporting Western militarism around the globe, third world peacekeepers serve as the West's janissaries for the post-Cold War world.
- Tony Blair has had no such confrontation, largely because his government accedes to almost every demand from big business and its janissaries.
Synonyms supporter, follower, adherent, devotee, champion, backer, upholder, promoter, fanatic, fan, enthusiast, stalwart, zealot, disciple, votary
OriginEarly 16th century: from French janissaire, based on Turkish yeniçeri, from yeni ‘new’ + çeri ‘troops’. |