英:[mə'haund; -'hu:nd]
Mahound如何读
Mahound是什么意思
- [古]穆罕默德
Mahound英英释义
Mahound[ mə'haund; -'hu:nd ]
- n.the Arab prophet who, according to Islam, was the last messenger of Allah (570-632)
同义词:MohammedMohammadMuhammadMahomet
Mahound 例句
1 They believed Rushdie insulted the Prophet Muhammad by naming a character Mahound, a medieval corruption of “Muhammad.”
2 Well they may; for if ever the Greeks do reign in Stamboul the sufferings of the Muslims will satisfy the most eager fanatic that ever cursed Mahound.
3 True, they had plundered and eaten the faithful and shed innocent blood in oceans, but they hated the children of Mahound worse than the children of Christ.
4 "He was a heathen—he believed in Mahound."
5 He listened for the Frankish voices in his mind crying out against the Saracens, against the devilish religion of the one they called Mahound.
6 Through Mahound, Rushdie appears to cast doubt on the divine nature of the Quran.
7 The same romance brings in the story of the Stone of Samarkand, adapted from ch. xxxiv., and accounts for its sanctity in Saracen eyes because it had long formed a pedestal for Mahound!
8 And when she looked eastward for it she saw the face of Mahound.
9 Hall mentions him in his first satire: “Nor fright the reader with the Pagan vaunt Of mighty Mahound and great Termagaunt.”
10 But may Mahound and Termagaunt aid me never if I hang him not by the neck, so he give me not fair reason for this deed.
11 Knights, bishops, earls, this London spawn—by Mahound, I had sooner have been born a Mussulman— Less clashing with their priests— I am half-way down the slope—will no man stay me?
12 They had the Paynim at home: Mahound and Termagaunt were at their doors.
13 They were in the theatre at Arles, the Saracens, where the blessed martyr St. Trophimus had died in torments; they had set up there their idol of Mahound, and turned the place into a fortress.
14 It is Mahound, the Evil One, and he has gain'd my soul!
15 In addition, Rushdie’s Mahound puts his own words into the angel Gibreel’s mouth and delivers edicts to his followers that conveniently bolster his self-serving purposes.
16 "Now, in faith," said Wamba, "I cannot see that the worshippers of Mahound and Termagaunt have so greatly the advantage over the people once chosen of Heaven."
17 The King Marsilius holds the place, Who loveth not God, nor seeks His grace: He prays to Apollin, and serves Mahound; But he saved him not from the fate he found.
18 The future abbots seem to have been men of valour; for they armed themselves, when occasion called, against the followers of Mahound, who ventured from the passes of Spain into their territories.
19 "He was an idol of the misbelievers, like the false god Mahound."
20 But his men love him not, neither love they the English nor the Muscovy folk, for they are worshippers of Mahound, and endure not Christian men.