English to Japanese Meaning of mendicant - 乞丐


Mendicant :
乞丐

乞食, 乞丐, ラザロ, 金貸し, サーバント, 医師

乞丐

托鉢僧mendicants
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Definitions of mendicant in English
Noun(1) a male member of a religious order that originally relied solely on alms(2) a pauper who lives by begging
Adjective(1) practicing beggary
Examples of mendicant in English
(1) This new form was provided by the mendicant orders, the friars - mobile missionaries whose international organization cut clean through diocesan and parochial boundaries.(2) However, being a poor mendicant , I couldn't afford to buy any and so I just sat there, overpowered by the smell of delicious pakoras, eating my bag of rice.(3) When the mendicant friars arose in the thirteenth century, there was a need for more portable books, to accompany the wandering preachers in their work.(4) These experiences brought home to him the reality of suffering and the nature of the human predicament, and turning his back on family life he renounced the world and became a religious mendicant .(5) Furthermore, the universities quickly became a locus of conflict between the regular clergy and the newer mendicant orders, especially the Dominicans and the Franciscans.(6) In her study of mendicant sermons on the Magdalen, for example, Katherine Jansen finds no real difference between the various orders of friars, all of which were actively encouraging their lay congregations to confess.(7) Out on the sidewalk of Pacific Avenue, Santa Cruz's main shopping street, the normal carnival of pedestrians, loiterers, court jesters, fools, and mendicant troubadours milled and mingled on a warm spring afternoon.(8) The mendicant orders, of course, had always laid heavy emphasis on the spoken word in preaching and teaching.(9) Possibly it was sheer vanity and love of easily-won applause that drove him to act out the role of mendicant campus guru.(10) The mendicant orders, particularly the Dominicans, developed a supranational organization directed by provincial and general chapters and ultimately subject to the papacy.(11) The sight of a holy man, who seemed peaceful and content, finally inspired him to forsake palace, wife and family and become a wandering mendicant .(12) This was matched by a spiritual resurgence which we see very much in what was known as ÔÇÿthe observant reformÔÇÖ which was a reform of the mendicant orders like the Franciscans and the Dominicans.(13) With a cloth over his mouth to prevent his breath from inhaling any airborne creature, he spent the following nine years as a wandering, barefoot mendicant .(14) Expressions of ecstatic, unmediated emotional identification with a sacred figure were common in the art of the mendicant orders in general and in that of the Franciscans in particular.(15) Whether we're aware of it or not, our homes are veritable wildlife parks, from the obvious predators such as rats and mice to the more discreet dust mite or the mendicant bluebottle.(16) Following the foundation of two mendicant orders between 1205 and 1220, for a pope to name himself after either Francis or Dominic would have been to choose sides between two formidable organisations.
(1) on the mend ::
快方に向かって
(2) mend fences ::
フェンスを修理
Synonyms
Noun
1. friar ::
修道士
Different Forms
mendicant, mendicants
English to Japanese Dictionary: mendicant

Meaning and definitions of mendicant, translation in Japanese language for mendicant with similar and opposite words. Also find spoken pronunciation of mendicant in Japanese and in English language.

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What mendicant means in Japanese, mendicant meaning in Japanese, mendicant definition, examples and pronunciation of mendicant in Japanese language.

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