英:['rɪtjʊəlɪst]
美:['rɪtʃʊrlɪst]
英:['rɪtjʊəlɪst]
美:['rɪtʃʊrlɪst]
The first known use of ritualism was in 1843
rival1 of 3noun
one of two or more trying to get what only one can have
competitor
one that equals another : peer
rival2 of 3adjective
of, relating to, or being a rival
rival3 of 3verb
to be in competition with
to be as good as or almost as good as
manufacture linens that rival the world's best
rivalrynoun
the act of rivaling : the state of being a rival : competition
rivalrynoun
the act of rivaling : the state of being a rival : competition
ritzyadjective
very fashionable
stuck-up, snobbish
ritual1 of 2adjective
of or relating to rites or a ritual
a ritual dance
according to religious law or social custom
ritual2 of 2noun
an established form for a ceremony
a system of rites
a ceremonial act or action
a formal and customarily repeated act or series of acts
ritual1 of 2adjective
of or relating to rites or a ritual
a ritual dance
according to religious law or social custom
ritual2 of 2noun
an established form for a ceremony
a system of rites
a ceremonial act or action
a formal and customarily repeated act or series of acts
ritualismnoun
the use of ritual
1 They shrank from the ritualists who had no religion, and from the devotees who had no love in their hearts.
2 The Rev. Arthur Tooth, "the Man of the Mount," and that most celebrated ritualist, was in durance vile.
3 In general the vision of the ritualists was turned toward the past rather than the present and the future.
4 To these extravagant ritualists ceremonies are not simply the garb of religion: they are its flesh and blood, in whose absence dogma is but a lifeless skeleton.
5 Diverse were the people of the South, some scholars, some ritualists, some extreme sceptics, Lo! the marvellous effect of the sight of the Master! all such men gave up their own creeds and turned Vaishnav.
6 Let us indulge ourselves for a moment in what is known to ritualists as a responsive service, thus: Q.—What is a Supper Club?
7 He was both a mystic and a ritualist.
8 Now I maintain that papa's in the wrong about the navvy, and that the ritualist clergyman had no reason to be so utterly disconcerted, as papa declares he was, at this naïve answer.
9 Fitzjames's connection with certain prosecutions directed against the ritualists arose from a conversation between Sir F. Jeune, who was then junior counsel to the English Church Union, and its secretary the late Sir Charles Young.
10 It was a civil service, an educational structure, and a ritualist organization.
11 All the ritualism and symbolism and I'm just really drawn by all of that stuff.
12 Dr. Orchard is a ritualist in the midst of nonconformity; the first Free Churchman, I believe, to entertain exalted ceremonial aspirations, and to kneel for his orders at the feet of an orthodox bishop.
13 That is a convenient sneer for the younger generation of ritualists who have nothing to say and who perform ceremonies they don't understand; not much meaning there for the modern man.
14 That he was a ritualist was no drawback in Robina's eyes.
15 The modern ritualist is hardly to be considered the lineal descendant of these great scholars.
16 Tradition has fixed upon Desaguliers as the ritualist of the Grand Lodge, and Lyon speaks of him as "the pioneer and co-fabricator of symbolical Masonry."
17 The anti-ritualism of the modern mind suspects that there always is a dichotomy between the outward appearance and the inward reality.
18 IT appears that the extremest ritualist does not feel wholly bound to his prayer book.
19 The ritualist was also the preacher of a higher morality.
20 The ritualist and the puritan conception of worship will probably always exist side by side, for they represent two opposite conceptions of religion which can never entirely blend.
1 仪式主义的
2 仪式主义