英:['leɪɪk]
美:['leɪɪk]
英:['leɪɪk]
美:['leɪɪk]
la·ic
leI ihk
laically (adv.)
Adjective
1. concerning those not members of the clergy;
"set his collar in laic rather than clerical position"
"the lay ministry"
"the choir sings both sacred and secular music"
1560年代,“属于人民”(与神职人员和专业人员区分开来),源自16世纪的法语 laïque,源自晚期拉丁语 laicus,源自希腊语 laikos “属于人民的”,源自 laos “人民”(参见 lay(形容词))。
Late Latin laicus, from Late Greek laïkos, from Greek, of the people, from laos people
The first known use of laical was in 1562
1 It is all interesting even to a non-artistic laic, for there is much "dry point" of general application in the Professor's lectures.
2 “The present constitution states that Turkey is laic, secular, but does not define the term,” Mr. Akyol said by telephone this week.
3 The communal regimen was established in several towns, notably at St. Quentin and at Soissons, without trouble or violence, and with one accord amongst the laic and ecclesiastical lords and the inhabitants.
4 Far from acting with disregard to human life, the barbarians, moreover, knew nothing of the horrid punishments introduced at a later epoch by the laic and canonic laws under Roman and Byzantine influence.
5 In fact, all the high places, ecclesiastic or laic, are theirs; all the sinecures, ecclesiastic or laic, are theirs, or for their relations, adherents, prot�g�s, and servitors.
6 Luther himself, at the same time that he reserved to the new German church a certain measure of spontaneity and liberty, had placed it under the protection and preponderance of laic sovereigns.
7 About gardening he understood as little as a laic about the secrets of the Church.
8 Thus, at the end of the thirteenth century, there were found face to face two systems, one laic and the other ecclesiastical, of absolute power.
9 How much more capital a crime it is for a digamist laic to act as a priest, when the priest, if he turn digamist, is deprived of the power of acting as a priest?…
10 I know that the popish impostor-priests go about saying that the Inquisition was never an ecclesiastical tribunal, but a laic.
11 This meant little in the Middle Ages, when all intellectual callings were clerical, when at Oxford gownsman and clerk, townsman and laic, were convertible terms.
12 Why—I speak, of course, in the ignorance of a laic—but, I ask, why not fumigate him and cleanse him?
13 God looks, with suprise and anger, because god does not allow laic of the height that reaches oneself.
上帝一看,又惊又怒,因为上帝是不答应凡人达到自己的高度的。
14 They are very easily alienated from all the higher orders of their subjects, whether civil or military, laic or ecclesiastical.
15 But I charge thee to beware of laic reason and human impulses.
16 Touching my peers, it is but necessary to say, that Mistress Martha Trapbois will none of them, whether clerical or laic.
17 It is the same in the financial and diplomatic services, in every branch of the administration, laic or ecclesiastical, in the physical order and in the moral order.
18 The functionaries, laic and clerical, assented with much joy; and the Colonel required and received Wildrake's assistance in putting on his cloak and rapier, as if he had been the dependent whose part he acted.
19 On the other hand, as instruction must be laic and Jacobin, "almost everywhere,"3172 the teacher is an outcast layman, a fallen Jacobin, some old, starving party member, unemployed, foul-mouthed and of ill-repute.
20 It's about what philosophical measures have to be taken to impose a powerful laic republic, unifying all.