英:[ˈdʒezjuɪt]
美:[ˈdʒeʒəwət]
英:[ˈdʒezjuɪt]
美:[ˈdʒeʒəwət]
Jes·u·it
je zu iht [or] je zhu iht
Jesuitic (adj.), Jesuitical (adj.), Jesuitically (adv.)
noun
a member of the Roman Catholic Society of Jesus founded by St. Ignatius Loyola in 1534 and devoted to missionary and educational work
one given to intrigue or equivocation
1540年代,源自现代拉丁语 Jesuita,指的是 Societas Jesu("耶稣会")的成员,该组织由伊格纳修斯·罗耀拉于1533年创立,旨在对抗新教。参见 Jesus。他们的敌人(包括天主教和新教国家)指责他们相信目的论,因此有了“狡猾或虚伪的人”的意义(1630年代),以及 jesuitical “欺诈、设计、暗示”的意义(1610年代)。
New Latin Jesuita, from Late Latin Jesus
The first known use of Jesuit was in 1548
1 The original mission was founded by the Jesuit Padre Kino in 1692.
2 In “Paterson,” Driver plays a laconic bus driver who writes plain-spoken poetry, and in “Silence,” he and Andrew Garfield portray 17th-century Jesuit priests.
3 At the Jesuit church, I picked up a booklet I had also noticed on Dean Gandy’s coffee table—For Men of Good Will, by Father Robert Guste.
4 He omits all reference to the pervasive influence of the Jesuits in Brazil, ruled by King Philip after he assumed the Portuguese crown in 1580.
5 Under the brilliant glass mosaics in the Marquette building lobby, she gave us a quick rundown on Father Marquette, a Jesuit missionary.
6 She wants prayers from all the priests but the Jesuits.
7 It was invented sometime in the 17th century by Athanasius Kircher, a German Jesuit renaissance man operating in the fields of medicine, oriental studies and geology.
8 The takouma are Catholic, having been converted in the early 17th century by a Jesuit priest clever enough to draw a straight line between the Holy Trinity and the Native religion.
9 Yabushige defies the wishes of his Portuguese Jesuit translator and spares Blackthorne, who seems a mere pirate until his Protestant desecration of the Catholic cross tips off the nobleman to his true motivations.
10 He had a Jesuit education: Brooklyn Prep and then Georgetown University, where he had intended to study English literature but shifted his energies to the theater.
11 One of the key groups that spread these teachings was founded in the 1530s: the Jesuit order, a collection of highly trained intellectuals well suited to attack Protestantism.
12 Within a day or two he had left; Galileo was thus in Rome as the Jesuit astronomers turned their telescopes on Venus and watched it move towards a half-circle.
13 Accessibility and forced sociability should allow retired Jesuits to remain “in community” longer than they otherwise might, says Catherine R. Morency, the health care coordinator for the Jesuits’ New England province.
14 His ninth film with Mr. Scorsese, “Silence,” about 17th-century Jesuits colonizing Macao and Japan, opens next month.
15 A Jesuit mathematician did the geometry calculations to determine the distance to a stockpile of gunpowder the Dutch had brought ashore and the angle of elevation at which the cannon should be set.
16 "You're playing a persecuted 17th century Jesuit priest. So it's good to, I think, have a little struggle. Also you're very tired and hungry, as are the characters," said Driver.
17 Their dress marked them as members of the Society of Jesus, the leading religious order of the day, as did their place of meeting—the Collegio Romano, headquarters of the Jesuits’ far-flung empire of learning.
18 He was part of a discussion on humor and spirituality at the Jesuit school with New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan.
19 And without the shelter, the students at Gonzaga, whose motto is the Jesuit saying “Men for Others,” wouldn’t have such a unique opportunity to fulfill their service obligation.
20 When the Jesuits came in the 16th century and showed them a water clock, they thought it was the coolest thing, but the Jesuits said, "You invented this."