释义 |
Definition of reconsecrate in English: reconsecrateverb riːˈkɒnsɪkreɪtˌriˈkɑnsɪˌkreɪt [with object]Consecrate (someone or something) again. 再次圣化;重新使就圣职 would not the cathedral have to be reconsecrated? Example sentencesExamples - In 1825, Charles X, last surviving brother of Louis XVI, even underwent an elaborate coronation, in the traditional setting of Reims Cathedral, to reconsecrate the bond between his dynasty and God.
- The church, built by Hawksmoor, was completed in 1725, although the interior was destroyed by fire in 1850 and reconsecrated in 1857.
- Prior even to his election as pope, Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini paid for the restoration of the district church of S. Martino, which was reconsecrated on August 10, 1458.
- The bells tolled as parishioners carrying candles filed out through the 13th-century doorway of St Ninian's church last night to reconsecrate the ground in which the unfortunate woman's remains once lay.
- In particular, says the Report, it was thought necessary in the Early Church to exorcise the sites of churches to be consecrated or reconsecrated.
- The bishop of the diocese is now pondering whether to reconsecrate the site after news of what happened there emerged.
- There is, in the particular acts we do, a way of reconsecrating our lives, reminding ourselves of what's important and carrying on in the best kind of way.
- At the end of the 19th century it was reconsecrated as the Spitalfields Great Synagogue for the East End's newly arrived Jews.
- James and Preston wanted the land to be taken from the mine, prayed over, filled in, and reconsecrated to the spirits who dwell there.
- It has traditionally been argued that, after the Edict of Constantine in 314, there was a concerted programme to reconsecrate pagan temples as Christian churches.
- The wedding took place in a Champagne cellar as churches were not yet reconsecrated following the French Revolution.
Derivativesnounriːkɒnsɪˈkreɪʃ(ə)n Sri Kapaleeswarar Temple in Mylapore gets a facelift, a reconsecration and general sprucing up. Example sentencesExamples - Other pranks that have been carried out include the sounding of a Muslim call to prayer in Trinity chapel, requiring its reconsecration.
- Each concert was, for Milstein, an act of reconsecration.
- Poor William Laud, the archbishop everyone loves to hate, is found guilty of making ‘an almighty fuss’ over the reconsecration of St. Katherine Cree, and turning the service into ‘a liturgical floorshow’.
- According to the head of the Greek Orthodox parish for Bethlehem, Father Speridon, the mass was a reconsecration since the church marking the spot where Jesus was born had been desecrated during the siege.
Definition of reconsecrate in US English: reconsecrateverbˌriˈkɑnsɪˌkreɪtˌrēˈkänsiˌkrāt [with object]Consecrate (someone or something) again. 再次圣化;重新使就圣职 Example sentencesExamples - Prior even to his election as pope, Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini paid for the restoration of the district church of S. Martino, which was reconsecrated on August 10, 1458.
- There is, in the particular acts we do, a way of reconsecrating our lives, reminding ourselves of what's important and carrying on in the best kind of way.
- The bishop of the diocese is now pondering whether to reconsecrate the site after news of what happened there emerged.
- James and Preston wanted the land to be taken from the mine, prayed over, filled in, and reconsecrated to the spirits who dwell there.
- In particular, says the Report, it was thought necessary in the Early Church to exorcise the sites of churches to be consecrated or reconsecrated.
- The wedding took place in a Champagne cellar as churches were not yet reconsecrated following the French Revolution.
- In 1825, Charles X, last surviving brother of Louis XVI, even underwent an elaborate coronation, in the traditional setting of Reims Cathedral, to reconsecrate the bond between his dynasty and God.
- It has traditionally been argued that, after the Edict of Constantine in 314, there was a concerted programme to reconsecrate pagan temples as Christian churches.
- The bells tolled as parishioners carrying candles filed out through the 13th-century doorway of St Ninian's church last night to reconsecrate the ground in which the unfortunate woman's remains once lay.
- At the end of the 19th century it was reconsecrated as the Spitalfields Great Synagogue for the East End's newly arrived Jews.
- The church, built by Hawksmoor, was completed in 1725, although the interior was destroyed by fire in 1850 and reconsecrated in 1857.
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