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词汇 laic
释义

Definition of laic in English:

laic

adjective ˈleɪɪkˈleɪɪk
formal
  • Of the laity; secular.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There is an advantage but there is a kind of, you know, negative side to it as well because you never know whether or not you understand fully, well, let's say, the French side, the laic side.
    • Let American Studies go on road shows to institutions of higher learning both laic and religious.
    • From 1850 until the national legislation proposed by Jules Ferry in 1880 forbade tuition in all public primary schools, a substantially higher percentage of students in Catholic schools paid no tuition compared to those in laic schools.
    • Only very rarely did a civilian enter the real Government building, which was among the most protected buildings in the world, magical and laic.
    • Here, as everywhere it is very favourable to congregational schools but generally it does not make open war on laic institutions.
    • This strikes me as entirely in line with the humanist, sternly laic tradition of the Fifth Republic, but it is so strongly removed from the thought of the Pontiff in his encyclicals as to raise the question of whether it was meant as a snub.
    • As the system reached completion, Catholic schools were not simply sharing in educational growth but actually taking students away from laic teachers.
    • Catholic schools became more important as alternatives and less important as supplements to laic schools.
    Synonyms
    earthly, terrestrial, temporal, mundane, mortal, human, non-spiritual, unspiritual, material, materialistic, physical, tangible, carnal, fleshly, bodily, corporeal, gross, sensual, base, sordid, vile, profane
noun ˈleɪɪkˈleɪɪk
formal
  • A person who is not a member of the clergy; a layperson.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • As a married laic whose past is now being exposed in the media, his lawyer suggests psychiatric counseling that can be possibly entered in his defense.

Derivatives

  • laical

  • adjective ˈleɪɪk(ə)lˈleɪək(ə)l
    formal
  • laically

  • adverb
    formal

Origin

Mid 16th century: from late Latin laicus (see lay2).

Definition of laic in US English:

laic

adjectiveˈlāikˈleɪɪk
formal
  • Nonclerical; lay.

    世俗的,俗人的;外行的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • As the system reached completion, Catholic schools were not simply sharing in educational growth but actually taking students away from laic teachers.
    • Only very rarely did a civilian enter the real Government building, which was among the most protected buildings in the world, magical and laic.
    • Let American Studies go on road shows to institutions of higher learning both laic and religious.
    • This strikes me as entirely in line with the humanist, sternly laic tradition of the Fifth Republic, but it is so strongly removed from the thought of the Pontiff in his encyclicals as to raise the question of whether it was meant as a snub.
    • Here, as everywhere it is very favourable to congregational schools but generally it does not make open war on laic institutions.
    • Catholic schools became more important as alternatives and less important as supplements to laic schools.
    • From 1850 until the national legislation proposed by Jules Ferry in 1880 forbade tuition in all public primary schools, a substantially higher percentage of students in Catholic schools paid no tuition compared to those in laic schools.
    • There is an advantage but there is a kind of, you know, negative side to it as well because you never know whether or not you understand fully, well, let's say, the French side, the laic side.
    Synonyms
    earthly, terrestrial, temporal, mundane, mortal, human, non-spiritual, unspiritual, material, materialistic, physical, tangible, carnal, fleshly, bodily, corporeal, gross, sensual, base, sordid, vile, profane
nounˈlāikˈleɪɪk
formal
  • A layperson; a noncleric.

    俗人;外行

    Example sentencesExamples
    • As a married laic whose past is now being exposed in the media, his lawyer suggests psychiatric counseling that can be possibly entered in his defense.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from late Latin laicus (see lay).

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