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词汇 perdition
释义

Definition of perdition in English:

perdition

noun pəˈdɪʃ(ə)npərˈdɪʃən
mass noun
  • 1(in Christian theology) a state of eternal punishment and damnation into which a sinful and unrepentant person passes after death.

    (基督教神学)永劫

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I took it for granted in my article that God may sometimes give special graces to dying persons to rescue them from the jaws of perdition.
    • Removing the will from God does not, therefore, deny human freedom; one remains free either to wander into perdition, or, through grace, to return where one belongs, in God.
    • This breeze reeked of the incense cast upon the brazier of such sulfurous content to seem as though spewed from the bowels of perdition.
    • But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.
    • He despises the ignorant and the sinner as doomed to perdition, nay, he considers them as the enemies of God, and as such to be persecuted.
    • At bottom - and yes, the bottom is a long way down - he and my father may not have thought about God and perdition in such different terms.
    • Their aim is to persuade his hearers to pursue the better and safer path by alerting them to the danger of eternal perdition.
    • But they had all seemed pretty much condemned to perdition anyway.
    • I withdraw it from the dark thoughts and from the spirit of perdition and I give it to God.
    • Hence, if the children suffer eternal perdition because their parents, who are themselves Christians, do not teach them how to attain salvation, God will judge and punish the parents.
    • The Christian could not be tolerant or detached for the Christian could not remain indifferent to something which inevitably meant the loss of his soul and perdition for others.
    • But salvation and perdition always hang in the balance.
    • It is obvious that the motives of the Holy See and its agents were laudable; they wanted to save the souls of the millions under their care from everlasting perdition.
    • My daddy thought acting was the road to perdition.
    Synonyms
    damnation, eternal punishment
    hell, hellfire, spiritual destruction, doom, ruin, ruination, condemnation, destruction, downfall
    1. 1.1 Complete and utter ruin.
      彻底完蛋;完全破产
      she used her last banknote to buy herself a square meal before perdition

      她在彻底完蛋之前,用最后一张钞票吃了一顿美餐。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • In recent years various squads have, though not intentionally, completed their campaigns in a state of utter perdition.
      • Fairness can best thrive in a culture of honesty, goodwill, compassion and tolerance, not the prevailing culture of callousness and perdition.
      • However, like many codes of conduct, rather than serving its adherents, it served its masters - thereby providing a framework which would ensure loyalty and fierce advocacy through the threat of social and spiritual perdition.
      • Since humans fear the unknown, death, disease, and perdition more than they fear their mortal enemies, men and women probably ran to shamans and wise women long before they settled in villages and towns.
      • In other words, whichever route one takes in this intellectual landscape, it descends into the same perdition.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French perdiciun, from ecclesiastical Latin perditio(n-), from Latin perdere 'destroy', from per- 'completely, to destruction' + the base of dare 'put'.

Definition of perdition in US English:

perdition

nounpərˈdɪʃənpərˈdiSHən
  • (in Christian theology) a state of eternal punishment and damnation into which a sinful and unpenitent person passes after death.

    (基督教神学)永劫

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Hence, if the children suffer eternal perdition because their parents, who are themselves Christians, do not teach them how to attain salvation, God will judge and punish the parents.
    • But they had all seemed pretty much condemned to perdition anyway.
    • I took it for granted in my article that God may sometimes give special graces to dying persons to rescue them from the jaws of perdition.
    • Removing the will from God does not, therefore, deny human freedom; one remains free either to wander into perdition, or, through grace, to return where one belongs, in God.
    • Their aim is to persuade his hearers to pursue the better and safer path by alerting them to the danger of eternal perdition.
    • It is obvious that the motives of the Holy See and its agents were laudable; they wanted to save the souls of the millions under their care from everlasting perdition.
    • But salvation and perdition always hang in the balance.
    • At bottom - and yes, the bottom is a long way down - he and my father may not have thought about God and perdition in such different terms.
    • I withdraw it from the dark thoughts and from the spirit of perdition and I give it to God.
    • My daddy thought acting was the road to perdition.
    • The Christian could not be tolerant or detached for the Christian could not remain indifferent to something which inevitably meant the loss of his soul and perdition for others.
    • He despises the ignorant and the sinner as doomed to perdition, nay, he considers them as the enemies of God, and as such to be persecuted.
    • This breeze reeked of the incense cast upon the brazier of such sulfurous content to seem as though spewed from the bowels of perdition.
    • But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.
    Synonyms
    damnation, eternal punishment

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French perdiciun, from ecclesiastical Latin perditio(n-), from Latin perdere ‘destroy’, from per- ‘completely, to destruction’ + the base of dare ‘put’.

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