释义 |
Iconian, a. and n.|aɪˈkəʊnɪən| [-an.] A. adj. Of or pertaining to Iconium (mod. Konya), a town in southern Asia Minor where St. Paul preached, or to the church established there (Acts xiii. 5, xiv. 1–7). B. n. A native or inhabitant of Iconium.
1899W. M. Ramsay in Expositor Aug. 112 There were strife and wrangling and jealousy between the Antiochean Church and the Iconian Church about precedence and comparative dignity. 1911― First Christ. Cent. xxv. 168 St. Paul addressed the Iconian audiences in Greek. Ibid. 171 The Iconians clung to their Phrygian character as opposed to the Lycaonian. |