英:['semɪˌneərɪst]
美:['seməˌnerɪst]
英:['semɪˌneərɪst]
美:['seməˌnerɪst]
The first known use of seminarist was in 1835
1 The seminarist was annoyed at this attempt to steal the applause from him, but Boulatoff did not like Elkin’s manner and offered him no encouragement.
2 The seminarist found examples of every sort of architecture that had flourished in the Peninsula.
3 A tall young monk was going about with some seminarists explaining the legend to them.
4 The shadows were lengthening in the avenues and grass-bordered paths where the seminarists had been walking in twos and threes among the playing children.
5 The gawky seminarist was silent, with an angry air which implied that the arguments one was compelled to follow here were exasperatingly beneath one’s criticism.
6 In the pleasant land of France, the seminarists and the monks were inflamed with unheard-of fury against the ingenious demons and the men of learning.
7 But as the bell began to speak, there was a sudden charge mostly of young priests and seminarists—black skirts flying, black legs leaping—across the open space and up the steps.
8 The meeting which we held with the seminarists at that time was one of the most solemn meetings which I ever attended.
9 A long procession of seminarists came in from the college which is under the shadow of that great church, two by two, in black cassocks and short white surplices.
10 One-time seminarist, navy man, stockbroker, art collector and Sunday painter, travelling salesman, bill-poster, ceramicist, labourer, journalist and editor, Gauguin also had an eye for posterity.
11 One day, when the superior was passing by the chamber of the seminarist, he heard him talking with some one; he entered, and asked who he was conversing with.
12 The Spanish seminarist revolted against his old faith with all the impetuosity of his vehement temperament.
13 Every impropriety, every sensuality and low passion is there: the childish, dandified seminarist, the licentious priest, the fat curate who looks like Maingrat, &c.
14 But his education as page and seminarist was not such as to bring him either honour or the love of women.
15 Among the number of seminarists despatched from Douay, and capitally convicted under the statute above-mentioned, were the two priests whose execution has just been narrated.
16 The life of a seminarist in a convent was to be mine!
17 One had the dreamy pleasure that some sequestered seminarist might have, who, on a sunny bench, under high monastic walls, reads of the gallantries and adventures of the great ungodly world outside.
18 All the vessels and the bells and chalices were melted; the stuffs some virtuous persons had sent to us to clothe a few seminarists, or poor savages, were consumed in this same sacrifice.
19 He turned out to be a seminarist—I think they called it—from Ireland who was going to be trained for the priesthood at Louvain—lots of Irish used to come there in those days.
20 There are twenty thousand priests, "religious," and seminarists serving in the French Army.