英:[nəʊ'vɪʃɪeɪt]
美:[noʊ'vɪʃɪˌeɪt]
英:[nəʊ'vɪʃɪeɪt]
美:[noʊ'vɪʃɪˌeɪt]
词根:novice
n.novice 初学者,新手
novillero 见习斗牛士
novitiate 见习;修道士(或修女)的见习期
1 Hardly was the ceremony of assuming the habit completed, when the superior informed him he must depart on the morrow to perform his noviciate at ——, sixty miles' distance.
2 I went there with Madame Bernard before I began my noviciate, and I went again, for the last time, before I took the veil.
3 He too had passed a noviciate in the Clerk's office, had studied law under the guidance of Wythe, and had been very successful.
4 And for want of a hundred cart-loads of stone which I had worked at the quarry—doors and windows—I have not finished the students' studies'—probably in the noviciate near the Claustro da Micha.
5 The third, the circle of voyages, Abred, comprised all the noviciate; it was there, at the bottom of the abysses, in the great oceans, as Taliesin says, that the first breath of man commenced.
6 But then she never continued any in her house, whom, after a due noviciate, she found un-tractable, or unwilling to comply with the rules of it.
7 Those young persons who desire to be admitted to the beguinage must first become postulants, and afterward make their noviciate in the convents or communities.
8 I now know all about it: there is no noviciate, there are no clumsy attempts; the workmanship is perfect from the outset, the product ejected spreads over the hinder part.
9 She was the favourite pupil of the nuns, had taken no vows, pledged herself to no noviciate, ever mindful of her promise to her father.
10 You are indeed in your noviciate, as to every laudable attainment.
11 They would distract her mind, Brother Copas reflected, and tore up the letter he had written delaying her noviciate on the ground of her father's illness.
12 Monsignor Saracinesca had watched her progress from her noviciate to her present position of responsibility, and had often spoken of her with the Mother Superior.
13 Something similar to this period of quiet observation, might not be inexpedient for a noviciate in society.
14 During the whole time of his noviciate the Platonic philosopher kept company with the Bohemians continually, and was thus enabled to study their habits more thoroughly, not without being very much astonished at times.
15 A flourish of trumpets followed, while the margrave, with the flat of his sword, touched the noviciate three times on the shoulder.
16 A line from "Religious Musings," 1796:— I discipline my young noviciate thought.
17 She then became a novice in the Carmelite monastery in Granada, and during her noviciate had revelations, like those of St. Teresa, about a reform of the Order.
18 After four years of such instruction, his father's death called him home to inherit his property, and he spent the three years that followed by tourneying in the noviciate of knighthood.
19 The year of noviciate being passed he made his solemn profession on March 25, 1476, and remained for about four years more in the monastery, during which time he finished his studies and became priest.
20 As soon as the pupil has passed her noviciate in the art, she holds both reins in the left hand.