请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 catholic
释义

catholicadj.n.

Brit. /ˈkaθ(ə)lɪk/, U.S. /ˈkæθ(ə)lɪk/
Forms:

α. Middle English catholich, Middle English catholoque, Middle English–1500s catholyk, Middle English–1500s catholyque, Middle English–1600s catholik, Middle English–1600s catholike, Middle English–1600s catholique, Middle English–1600s catholyke, Middle English– catholic, 1500s kathelike (Scottish), 1500s–1600s catholicke, 1500s–1600s catholicque, 1500s–1600s catholyck, 1500s–1600s catholycke, 1500s–1700s catholick, 1800s– cat'lic (chiefly Irish English), 1800s– catlick (regional).

β. late Middle English–1500s chatholyque, 1500s chatholyke, 1500s–1600s chatholick, 1500s–1600s chatholicke, 1500s–1600s chatholik, 1500s–1600s chatholike, 1500s–1600s chatholique, 1600s chatholic.

γ. 1500s cotholicque, 1500s cotholyke, 1500s–1600s cotholicke, 1500s–1600s cotholike, 1500s–1600s cotholique, 1600s cotholick, 1600s cotholik.

Usually with capital initial except in senses A. 7, A. 8, A. 9.
Origin: Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French catholique, Latin catholicus.
Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman and Middle French catholike, catholique (French catholique ) (adjective) relating to the Roman Catholic Church and its teachings (beginning of the 14th cent. in Old French), (of a person) following the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church (1370), (noun) follower of Roman Catholic teachings (a1400), and its etymon (ii) post-classical Latin catholicus (adjective) universal, general (early 3rd cent. in Tertullian), in accordance with the teachings of the Christian church (4th cent.), (noun) member of the Catholic church (4th cent.; see note on how the term was understood historically) < ancient Greek καθολικός (adjective) general, universal < καθόλου (i.e. καθ' ὅλου ) on the whole, in general, as a whole, generally, universally ( < κατά concerning, in respect of, according to (see cata- prefix) + ὅλος whole: see holo- comb. form) + -ικός -ic suffix.Compare Old Occitan catolic (13th cent.), Catalan Catòlic (14th cent.), Spanish católico (10th cent.), Portuguese católico (13th cent.), Italian cattolico (early 14th cent.), Early Irish cathlac (12th cent.), Welsh Catholig (13th cent.), Old High German catholīc (in an apparently isolated attestation). Compare also Dutch katholiek (1521 as catholijck ), and (with different suffix) German katholisch (16th cent.), Swedish katolsk , †katolisk (1582). Semantic background. The Greek phrase ἡ καθολικὴ ἐκκλησία , literally ‘the universal church’, was originally (in Hellenistic Greek) used to denoted all followers of Christianity collectively (as opposed to individual congregations), but subsequently came to denote the teaching and followers of one particular tradition, which claimed to directly represent the original teachings of the early Church, in opposition to what it regarded as heresy. This was borrowed into Latin as ecclesia catholica , and after the schism was typically used to refer to the Latin-speaking Church of Rome led by the Pope (compare sense A. 5, as opposed to the Orthodox churches of Eastern Europe; compare orthodox adj. 3). During the Reformation, this use was reinforced to distinguish the Church of Rome from the new Protestant denominations (but compare also the discussion at branch A. I.). Variant forms. The β. forms (with initial ch ) are paralleled in Latin in the same period and appear to show a graphic assimilation of the initial to the internal th (without a change of pronunciation). They sometimes appear alongside α. forms in the same texts. Specific senses. In use as noun with reference to the primate of one of the Eastern churches (see sense B. 2) after post-classical Latin catholicus, catholicos or its etymon Byzantine Greek καθολικός, noun (see Catholicos n.). Pronunciation This is one of a small number of borrowings in -ic in which the stress is not on the penultimate syllable; compare the discussion at -ic suffix.
A. adj.
I. In ecclesiastical use.Since the Reformation, the term ‘Catholic’ has chiefly been used to denote the part of the medieval Western or Latin Church which continued to be led by the Pope, as opposed to Protestant Churches (Lutheran, Reformed, or those episcopally-governed Churches descending from the Church of England which are now collectively referred to as the Anglican Communion) . Churches of the Reformation, however, also retained the term, giving it a wider or more absolute sense, not as the attribute of a single community, but of the whole communion of all Christians of all churches and ages. Particularly from the 19th century, some Anglicans claimed that the reformed Church in England was the national branch of the ‘Catholic Church’ in its historical sense (see sense A. 1a). This gave rise to the attempt to distinguish the continuing Latin Church under papal obedience, by further qualifying its chosen epithet of ‘Catholic’ with ‘Roman’ (but see sense A. 5). On this analogy Anglo-Catholic adj. and n. has been used since the mid 19th cent. as a self-descriptor for one ecclesiastical party and its adherents in the Anglican Communion.
1.
a. Of or belonging to the ancient Christian Church before the Great Schism between Eastern and Western Churches in the 11th cent., or any Church standing in historical continuity with it claiming shared doctrine, system, and practice (see sense A. 1b); of the true apostolic Church.
(a) Of belief, doctrine, practice, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > orthodoxy > [adjective]
righteOE
orthodoxc1454
catholicc1500
sound1526
catholicala1530
orthodoxastical1570
orthodoxical1577
orthodoxal1607
symmetral1660
hardshell1836
hard-shelled1842
observant1902
bien pensant1923
c1350 Athanasian Creed (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) 193 Who so wyl be sauf, nede it is to hym..þat he holde þe catholich faiþe.
c1500 Melusine (1895) 31 My byleue is as a Catholique byleue oughte for to be.
1551 T. Cranmer Answer S. Gardiner 1 An explication and assertion of the true catholyke fayth in the mattier of the sacrament.
1640 W. Habington Castara (ed. 3) iii. 169 Catholique faith is the foundation on which he erects Religion.
1762 P. Lodvill tr. Orthodox Confession Catholic & Apostolic Eastern-church i. 88 Those who deserve well of the Church; and endeavour to propogate and extend the orthodox and catholic Religion.
1840 Tracts for Times No. 85. vi The Catholic or Church system of doctrine and worship.
1983 Jrnl. Relig. 63 366 We can acknowledge him [sc. Luther] as the champion of a catholic doctrine of grace.
2010 R. Roukema Jesus, Gnosis & Dogma x. 193 The Nicene Creed is a concise, orderly account of the catholic faith.
(b) Of a person, group, etc.
ΚΠ
c1441 in J. Raine Corr., Inventories, Acct. Rolls, & Law Proc. Priory of Coldingham (1841) 258 The worthy catholike king..gaff thaim lesence for ever to have accesse to the said place.
c1500 Melusine (1895) 32 A man very catholoque & of good feith.
1531 T. Elyot Gouernour iii. xxii. sig. fviiv Wherein no good catholyke man wyll any thynge doute though they be meruaylous.
1676 A. Sall True Catholic & Apostolic Faith Church of Eng. i. v. 38 I do not deny that Cranmer was truly ordained, having received his ordination from Catholic Bishops: so as I confess he lived and died a true Bishop.
1762 P. Lodvill tr. Orthodox Confession Catholic & Apostolic Eastern-church 9 What doth it behove a Catholic and Orthodox Christian Man to believe and do, that he may have eternal Life?
1881 E. A. Freeman Hist. Geogr. Europe I. iv. 101 The lands ruled either by the Catholic Frank or by the Arian Goth.
1982 Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. 72 14 The Lombards in Italy were surrounded and far outnumbered by the Catholic Romans.
2015 J. P. Wawrykow in H. Boersma & M. Levering Oxf. Handbk. Sacramental Theol. xv. 218 The sacraments held tremendous significance for Catholic Christians in the thirteenth century.
(c) Of any of the writers, fathers, or works of the ancient Christian Church, or accepted by any Church standing in historical continuity with it.
ΚΠ
a1500 (c1421) in C. Monro Lett. Margaret of Anjou (1863) 26 (MED) Contening al the bible, with gret part of Catholic Doctours for the better understanding of that same bible.
1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Pref. 14 Whatsoeuer in any catholike wryter is conteyned.
1593 T. Bilson Perpetual Govt. Christes Church xi. 157 What Presbyterie the primitiue Churches and Catholike fathers did acknowledge.
1632 R. Winterton tr. J. Gerhard Golden Chaine Divine Aphorismes 313 It is necessarie that this consent be grounded on the Catholike writings of the Prophets and Apostles, which are the onely foundation of the Church.
1705 W. Wall Hist. Infant-baptism II. viii. 265 These two last mention'd Opinions they have of the most antient Catholic Fathers.
1842 Tracts for Times No. 86. v. §3 What is popularity when it is opposed to Catholic Antiquity?
1927 H. C. Watt in Magnificat (Sisters of Mercy, New Hampsh.) May 7/2 Nor..does Anthony Stafford take issue..with the Marian doctrine of these Catholic Fathers.
2002 S. F. Brown in J. J. E. Gracia & T. B. Noone Compan. Philos. Middle Ages ii. 23 The traditional Catholic Fathers of the Church had a longer claim to respect.
(d) Of a particular church: standing in historical continuity with the ancient Christian Church and claiming shared doctrine, system, and practice; forming part of, or in communion with, the ancient Christian Church. Frequently with reference to the Anglican Church; cf. Anglo-Catholic adj. and n.
ΚΠ
?1567 Def. Priestes Mariages (new ed.) 355 Whatsoeuer was so enacted in this Englyshe churche, had sufficient strength, aucthoritie, and power, beyng a catholike and an apostolyke churche in it selfe.
1680 Sober Disc. Honest Cavalier 5 Now that which gives the Pope such a peculiar Envy to the Church of England, is this:..We retain the Face of an Ancient Catholick and Apostolick Church.
1725 P. Gretton Vindic. Doctr. Church Eng. viii. 281 We know you believe the Articles of the Apostles Creed, and are so far a catholic Church.
1833 C. F. Crusé tr. Eusebius Eccl. Hist. (ed. 2) vi. xliii. 265 One bishop in a catholic church.
1962 W. M. Southgate John Jewel & Probl. Doctrinal Authority iii. 52 Jewel stated categorically that the Church of Rome by professing doctrines which had no basis whatever in early apostolic and patristic Christianity, could no longer claim to be a Catholic Church.
2002 P. Avis Anglicanism & Christian Church (ed. 2) iii. 73 According to the pre-Laudian consensus, the Church of England was a catholic church whose roots went back to the beginning of the Christian era.
b. Designating the ancient Christian Church before the Great Schism between Eastern and Western Churches in the 11th cent., or any Church standing in historical continuity with it claiming shared doctrine, system, and practice. The designation was assumed by the Western or Latin Church after the Great Schism in distinction to Eastern or Orthodox (this continues in historical writing). It was claimed as its exclusive designation by the Latin Church that remained under the Roman obedience after the Reformation in the 16th cent. (cf. sense A. 5). It has also been used to include the Anglican Church regarded as a continuation of both the ancient and Latin Churches (cf. Anglo-Catholic adj. 1). The implied sense is ‘the Church or Churches which now truly represent the ancient undivided Church of Christendom’.
ΚΠ
?1526 J. Fisher Serm. at Paulis iii. sig. F The succession of Peter in dispite of al their ennemyes dothe yet continue, and yet beareth the name of the veray catholicke churche, and so shall do vnto the worldis ende.
c1534 Abp. Lee in J. Lingard Hist. Eng. (1855) V. i. 18/1 So that..the unitie of the faiethe and of the Catholique Chyrche [be] saved.
c1670 Bp. J. Taylor Serm. Whole Duty Clergy ii. 4 The Catholic Church hath been too much and too soon divided..but in things simply necessary, God hath preserved us still unbroken: all nations and all ages recite the Creed..and all Churches have been governed by Bishops.
1705 R. Nelson Compan. Festivals & Fasts (ed. 3) ii. vii. 456 The ancientest Fathers of the Catholick Church.
1834 Tracts for Times No. 61. 2 We [sc. English Church] are a branch of the Church Catholic.
1872 E. A. Freeman Gen. Sketch European Hist. vi. 111 The people of the Oriental provinces..putting forth or adopting doctrines which the Catholic Church, both of the Old and of the New Rome, looked on as heretical.
1912 Western Gaz. 24 May 10/2 There might be differences of opinion as to which was the proper successor to the Catholic Church of old.
1939 H. H. Henson Church of Eng. 64 The Anglican appeal lay to that Christian antiquity which preserved the picture of an undivided Catholic Church.
1989 Times 15 Aug. 5/3 It is recognition of the Catholic Church as an accepted part of Scottish life, as it was before the Reformation.
2015 K. W. Kaatz Rise of Christianity 8 Its [sc. the Nicene Creed's] ruling was crystal clear—the Catholic Church cursed everyone who believed anything the Arians believed.
c. In extended use, with reference to religions other than Christianity: orthodox, traditional. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1600 J. Pory tr. J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr. iii. 151 By some they are accounted catholique [L. catholici] or true Mahumetans, and by others they are holden for heretiks.
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage vii. vii. 575 They are not all Catholike Mahumetans.
2.
a. Of or belonging to the Christian Church considered as a whole; universally Christian.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Christianity > person > [adjective]
christeneOE
Christianc1300
generala1400
catholic1579
Nazaritan1614
discipular1788
Nazarene1819
c1443 R. Pecock Reule of Crysten Religioun (1927) 453 (MED) Þer is [not] eny gretter bileeue þan is þe comoun feiþ..which comoun feiþ is clepid catholik, þat is to seie vniuersal, profrid to alle men in holi scripture.
1579 W. Fulke Heskins Parl. Repealed in D. Heskins Ouerthrowne 94 He can neuer prooue his reseruation to be catholike or vniversally allowed and practised of the Church.
1651 C. Cartwright Certamen Religiosum i. 10 That Church whose Doctrine is most Catholick and universall must be the Catholick Church.
1777 J. W. Fletcher Reconciliation Ep. Ded. p. iv A great friend to a catholic gospel.
1807 J. Jebb Let. 20 Aug. in J. Jebb & A. Knox Thirty Years' Corr. (1834) I. 370 A catholic liturgy, must be formed on a catholic plan; that is, from a harmony of those dispersed and vital truths, which, in different ages, different countries, and different churches, were popularly, and effectually embodied, in established liturgies.
1882 F. W. Farrar Early Days Christianity I. 250 Christianity in all Churches was, and ever must be, in its essence Catholic—one and indivisible.
1970 Presbyterian Herald July–Aug. 7/1 I am first a Christian, secondly a catholic or universal Christian, thirdly a Calvinist.
2016 A. C. Osheim Church & Churches ii. 86 The universal church's discernment of a shared and catholic faith that is expressed diversely by the local churches.
b. Designating the whole Christian Church or all Christians collectively; = universal adj. 4. Frequently in catholic church. [After post-classical Latin ecclesia catholica (3rd cent.), Hellenistic Greek ἡ καθολικὴ ἐκκλησία.]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > Catholicity > [adjective]
universal?a1425
catholicala1530
Catholic Church1559
ecumenical1570
ecumenic1588
schismless1641
unsectarian1847
oecumenian1865
undenominational1871
multi-faith1951
society > faith > sect > Christianity > person > [noun] > collective
holy churchc897
churcheOE
brideOE
ChristendomOE
Christ's churchOE
Christianitya1300
motherc1300
brotherheadc1384
Peter's bargea1393
Church of Christc1400
faithfulc1400
body of Christ?1495
congregation1526
husbandry1526
Peter's ship1571
mother church1574
St. Peter's ship1678
Peter's bark1857
Peter's boat1893
priest1897
c1456 R. Pecock Bk. Faith (Trin. Cambr.) (1909) 285 (MED) Ech trewe feithful particuler chirche ouȝte be clepid orthodoxe chirche, thouȝ not ech such particuler feithful ouȝte be clepid catholik chirche, that is to seie, universal or general chirche.
1560–1 Scotch Conf. Faith xvi Whiche Kirk is Catholik, that is universall, becaus it conteanes the Elect of all aiges, all realmes, nationis, and tounges, be thai of the Jewis or be thai of the Gentiles, who have communioun and societie with God the Father, and with his Sone Christ Jesus.
1645 J. Ussher Body of Divin. (1647) 187 The Catholick Church, that is, God's whole or universall Assembly.
1739 Old Whig II. xci. 344 What and where is that church to which Christ has left this power?..Is it to the catholic and universal church, or to any national or provincial church?
1847 J. Yeowell Chron. Anc. Brit. Church xi. 110 As members of the church catholic.
1915 A. B. Roe Anna Owen Hoyers 64 All sectarianism and priestcraft will vanish away. The universal catholic church alone will remain.
2004 W. Kasper That they may All be One v. 81 The universal catholic Church is not identical with the Roman Catholic (Latin) Church.
3. In various titles designating the monarchs of Spain, esp. King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella I of Castile, as in Catholic King, Catholic Queen, Catholic Monarch. Cf. His Catholic Majesty.The title was used of Ferdinand and Isabella and their descendants by Pope Alexander VI in 1494 (and more formally in 1496) in recognition of their reconquest of Granada from the Moors, their discoveries in the New World, and their strengthening of the Church by various methods, including the Spanish Inquisition and compelling Jews to convert to Christianity or face exile. [After post-classical Latin rex catholicus (1496 as a formal title); compare Spanish rey católico (16th cent. in this sense, often in plural).]
ΚΠ
1531 tr. E. Fox et al. Determinations Moste Famous Vniuersities f. 4v The moste noble lady Catharine, quene of Englande, doughter of the Catholike king Ferdinande [L. Ferdinandi regis Catholici].
1588 W. Allen (title) Admonition to the Nobility and People of England..by the high and mightie kinge Catholike of Spaine.
1699 tr. B. de las Casas Art of Travelling in Acct. of First Voy. & Discov. made by Spaniards 234 The Orders given by the most Catholic Queen Isabella to General De-Larés were very prudent and useful.
1746 tr. E. Farnesio Mem. 7 A Match with the Presumptive Heiress of Parma and Placentia, which would put the Catholic King in Possession of certain rights.
1884 Jrnl. Amer. Geogr. Soc. N.Y. 16 180 Columbus..was received by the Catholic King and Queen.
1911 Times 28 Nov. 5/6 At Madrid every class, from the most Catholic King and Royal Family down to the humblest citizen, has shared in the demonstration.
1992 Renaissance Stud. 6 379 The Catholic Monarchs determined not to allow Portuguese legal arguments to stand in the way of their claims to the lands discovered by Columbus.
2017 S. Calif. Q. 99 427 The purpose was to obtain recognition of Spanish sovereignty from the natives and thus take effective possession of territories which otherwise, in point of law, could not fall under the jurisdiction of the Catholic King.
4. Addressed to all churches or people. Frequently in Catholic Epistle: (a name given to) the epistles of James, Peter, Jude, and John. Cf. general epistle n.Of the epistles of John, only 1 John was originally considered a catholic epistle; now, the second and third epistles of John are also included. [It is not certain that this was the original sense of Byzantine Greek ἐπιστολὴ καθολικὴ , since some early writers appear to use it in the sense ‘genuine and accepted’ (compare canonical epistles at canonical adj. 3): but the attribute has been understood in the sense ‘encyclical’ or ‘general’ since the 10th or 11th cent. Compare post-classical Latin epistola catholica (4th or 5th cent. in Jerome), Middle French epistre catholique (1524 or earlier; French epître catholique).]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > Testament > New Testament > epistle > [noun] > Catholic
general epistle1560
Catholic Epistle1582
1538 Bible (Coverdale) James (heading) The catholyke Epistle of the Apostle Iames.
1615 J. Boys Expos. Festiuall Epistles & Gospels 401 To conuert Iewes he wrote principally, but that which is said vnto them, is said vnto vs, and all; in which respect this letter is entituled, The generall or Catholike Epistle of S Iames.
1725 D. Cotes tr. L. E. Du Pin New Eccl. Hist. 17th Cent. I. v. 69 The Encyclick, Circular, or Catholick Letters, were address'd to all Churches, or to all the Faithful.
1855 B. F. Westcott Canon New Test. (1881) 395 It may be inferred that the seven Catholic Epistles were formed into a collection at the close of the third century.
1956 Harvard Theol. Rev. 49 159 Sometime between the 4th and 7th centuries, a recension of the N[ew] T[estament], or at least of the Pauline and Catholic epistles, into thought-lines was made.
2008 Church Times 16 May 25/3 The book explores the texts of the New Testament... It begins with the history of the period..before looking at Paul's letters, the Gospels, Acts.., the Catholic Epistles, and Revelation.
5. Designating that part of the Christian Church which acknowledges the Pope as its head; of, relating to, or associated with this church; = Roman Catholic adj. [Compare post-classical Latin Ecclesia apostolica catholica Romana (1607 or earlier).]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Christianity > Roman Catholicism > [adjective]
RomanisheOE
Laterana1400
Romana1500
papistical1527
popish1528
antichristian1532
pontifical1533
Babylonical1535
papish1538
Romish1538
papistic1545
west1549
catholic1554
catholic1554
mass-monging1556
western1562
Latin1564
Babylonian1567
Babylonish1570
Romish Catholic?1570
Romanist1572
Roman Catholic1587
papala1593
pseudo-catholical1601
Babylonic1602
pseudo-Catholic1605
Romist1605
Romified1609
Babelish1610
papizing1612
pontifician1612
pontificial1614
Romulean1615
papized1639
Romanistical1646
Romanical1664
papagan1679
popish-like1689
Anglo-Roman1766
papicolar1811
Romanistic1829
pre-Reformation1855
papalistic1861
papalized1879
1543 J. Bale Yet Course at Romyshe Foxe sig. Ev The catholyke faythe of thys malygnaunt madame, the churche of antichrist, the mother of myschefe.
1554 Copie of Let. from Queenes Maiestie unto Bysshoppe of London To remoue them, and place catholike men in their romes.
1602 R. Carew Surv. Cornwall i. f. 71 A matter practised..as well by the reformed, as Catholike Switzers.
1660 R. Coke Elements Power & Subjection 215 in Justice Vindicated If the Pope would be Head of the Catholique Church, the King would be Head of the Church of England.
1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 30 Whether..the Catholic heir [gave way] when the Protestant was preferred. View more context for this quotation
1860 Times 29 Aug. 2/5 (advt.) An English Catholic young lady wanted, as a teacher au-pair in a Catholic school, in return for lessons in French.
1982 Z. Edgell Beka Lamb xvi. 109 She raised him to be a modest Catholic boy.
2016 Times 29 Mar. 45/2 If she survived the operation, she prayed to God she would build a Catholic monastery in the Protestant Southern Bible belt.
6. Recognizing or having sympathies with all Christians; inclusive and tolerant as a Christian. Cf. sense A. 9a. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > Catholicity > [adjective] > having sympathies with all Christians
catholic1658
unionistic1850
1641 F. Rous Catholick Charitie i. 11 They have not that catholick spirit of love... But such men by likelihood, have a private spirit, by which they love a private part and faction.
1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 171 If such a Temper was universal, we might be all Catholick Christians, whatever Church or particular Profession we joyn'd to, or joyn'd in.
1750 J. Wesley Serm. Several Occasions III. 198 Catholick love is a Catholick Spirit.
?1852 in A. Macklin Tribute Memory of Alexander Symington App. 22 He was..sincerely devoted to the interests of his own denomination, yet of catholic feeling and bearing towards all others.
1874 J. S. Blackie On Self-culture 80 I should recommend specially, as calculated to enthuse a spirit of deep and catholic piety in the souls of the young,—Psalms i. viii. [etc.].
1926 Evening Tel. & Post (Dundee) 29 Oct. (6th ed.) 6/5 In preaching..,there was a spirit of poetry and a colour of catholic feeling which gave his pulpit ministration a distinctive character.
1950 Cheltenham Chron. & Gloucs. Graphic 16 Dec. 8/3 You..have been spared for so long to continue..to engage in the many good works which your Christian sympathy and catholic spirit have permitted you to support.
II. In non-ecclesiastical use.
7.
a. Of, relating to, or involving the whole world; worldwide, universal. Now chiefly in academic contexts.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > [adjective] > universal
universala1393
worldly1538
catholic1552
ecumenical1607
universary1642
panica1661
global1835
cosmic1846
pancosmic1853
universalistic1872
mondial1908
1543 J. Bale Yet Course at Romyshe Foxe sig. B.viiiv For catholyck is as moche to saye, as vnyuersall, or admyttynge all.
1664 N. Ingelo Bentivolio & Urania: 2nd Pt. v. 129 He hath a good Natural Wit, but that so over-match'd with Pride, that he..declareth frequently that the Universal World is not only obliged to hear him, but to..receive his Doctrines as the indisputable Commands of a Catholick Dictator in Knowledge.
1757 D. Hume Four Diss. iv. 213 A perfect serenity of mind, a recollection of thought, a due attention to the object; if any of these circumstances be wanting our experiment will be fallacious, and we shall be unable to judge of the catholic and universal beauty.
1885 Times (Weekly ed.) 11 Sept. 7/1 Science is truly catholic, and is bounded only by the universe.
1963 Jrnl. Hist. Ideas 24 277 The traditional search for a ‘langue matrice’, the primitive catholic tongue of mankind, revealed by God to Adam, but lost to man at Babel.
2000 W. C. Mackey Gender Roles, Trad., & Generations to Come xii. 185 All societies have that principle..; thus the logic here is catholic and pan-cultural.
b. Of a law, principle, condition, substance, etc.: universally prevalent; applying to or encompassing all. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1561 T. Norton tr. J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig. iii. f. 248 This is to be holden for a catholike principle [L. catholicum theorema].
1660 R. Sharrock Hist. Propagation & Improvem. Veg. 79 The universal and catholick order of all bulbous plants, is..that about St. James' tyde they be taken out of the ground.
1676 J. Evelyn Philos. Disc. Earth 45 There is but one Catholic, homogeneous, fluid matter.
1696 J. Edwards Demonstr. Existence God i. i. 2 A great Proof of the Catholick Degeneracy of this present Age.
1830 M. T. Sadler Law of Population II. iv. App. 665 To this catholic law of Nature man is submitted.
c. Esp. of a medicinal preparation: that is suitable, effective, or applicable in all cases, diseases, or instances. Obsolete.Frequently in figurative contexts.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > [adjective] > universal
catholic1617
catholicala1640
panaceana1657
panpharmacal1657
pancrastical1698
1604 F. Herring Modest Def. Caueat Ep. Ded. sig. B2v If any suppose this to be Contentio de lana caprina aut asini vmbra, too base and meane a toy or trifle to be stood vpon, let him remember that it is made no base dredge, but a noble, catholike, & diuine Medicine.
1617 J. Woodall Surgions Mate 62 It hath the prime place, for a Catholicke medicine in exulcerations.
1693 F. Slare in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 17 906 Tho' Spirit of Wine be a very Catholic Menstruum.
1742 W. Ellis London & Country Brewer (ed. 4) iv. i. 261 [Water] is the only Catholick Nourishment of all Vegetables, Animals, and Minerals.
1748 D. Hume Philos. Ess. Human Understanding i. 12 Accurate and just Reasoning is the only catholic Remedy, fitted for all Persons and Dispositions.
1817 Analectic Mag. Oct. 291 The present distress of the country proceeds entirely from the extreme parsimony of the government; and the only catholic remedy is, for it to increase its levies and its expenditure without sparing.
1845 Hereford Jrnl. 9 Apr. He proffers his catholic remedy indiscriminately—to the old and the young, the feeble habitual drunkard, [etc.].
8.
a. Occurring, found, or done often; usual, common. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > [adjective] > general or prevalent
commona1325
generala1393
usual1396
popular?a1425
riveda1513
vulgarc1550
current1563
afloat1571
widespread1582
penny-rife1606
catholic1607
spacious1610
epidemical1614
epidemial1616
epidemic1617
prevailent1623
regnant1623
fashionablea1627
wide-spreading1655
endemical1658
prevalent1658
endemiala1682
obtaining1682
prevailing1682
endemious1684
sterling1696
running1697
(as) common as dirt (also muck)1737
prevailant1794
exoteric1814
endemic1852
widish1864
prolate1882
going1909
1552 Abp. J. Hamilton Catech. (title page) The catechisme, that is to say, ane commone and catholik instructioun of the christin people in materis of our catholik faith and religioun.
1632 P. Massinger Emperour of East iv. iii. sig. I2v The pox Sir..Is the more Catholick sickenesse.
1664 J. Evelyn Sylva 19 Deep interring of Roots is amongst the Catholick Mistakes.
1719 T. Gordon Apol. for Parson Alberoni 10 They always Scorn'd to be barr'd by the trifling Regards of Conscience and Swearing, from the more catholick Pursuits of their Pleasure and Power.
b. Complete or without exception; entire, full. rare after 17th cent.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > completeness > [adjective] > complete or without exception
entirea1400
catholic1664
impartiala1716
total1935
1620 T. Shelton tr. M. de Cervantes 2nd Pt. Don Quixote lv. 369 Seeing himselfe well and whole, and in Catholike health [Sp. Catolico de salud], he thought hee could neuer praise God sufficiently for the fauour hee had done him.
1671 J. Dryden Evening's Love iv. 57 Alon. And, How fares my Son-in-Law that lives there? Mel. In Catholique health, Sir.
1884 Liverpool Mercury 7 June 3/8 There must be a catholic acceptance of all knowledge, freedom in its discussions, high teaching power and an open door to all.
1973 Times Lit. Suppl. 21 Sept. 1077/2 The catholic acceptance of these attributions [i.e. of paintings to Giuseppe Castiglione] is of a piece with the approach adopted by the authors in their narrative, in which critical argument is not produced, although the qualification of their opinions is continually felt.
9.
a. Esp. of a person, a person's tastes, etc.: having sympathies with all; all-embracing, broad-minded. Also figurative. Cf. sense A. 6.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > condition or state of being inclusive > [adjective] > inclusive or comprehensive > specifically of taste or feeling
catholic1586
1586 T. Bright Treat. Melancholie iv. 16 The stomach becommeth the most Catholicke parte in all the bodie, carying a more indifferent affection to whatsoeuer is receiued then anie part beside.
1620 J. Parkinson Paradisi in Sole xxvi. 215 Such as are Catholicke obseruers of all naturs store.
1701 Enq. Inconveniences Public & Advantages Private Elections 10 He is the only Magistrate..Who does Justice indiscriminately to all: Who is Catholic in his Principles, and without any Party Byass in his Practice.
1822 C. Lamb in London Mag. July 33/2 I bless my stars for a taste so catholic, so unexcluding.
1851 T. Carlyle Life J. Sterling i. iv. 46 Of these two Universities, Cambridge is decidedly the more catholic (not Roman catholic, but Human catholic).
1878 R. L. Stevenson Inland Voy. 103 On these different manifestations, the sun poured its clear and catholic looks.
1921 H. Crane Let. 17 Oct. (1965) 67 I have the apparent brassiness to call myself a person of rather catholic admirations.
2018 Times 28 Oct. (Times2 section) 3/5 His catholic tastes—he likes Verdi as well as Drake—extend to his friends.
b. Of universal human interest or use; pertinent to the needs, interests, or sympathies of all.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > [adjective] > affecting all indiscriminately > affecting the whole human race
catholica1631
catholical1674
a1631 J. Donne Serm. (1954) VII. 51 So are there some..Catholique, universall Psalmes, that apply themselves to all necessities.
1704 J. Swift Disc. Mech. Operat. Spirit i, in Tale of Tub 289 In all my Writings, I have had constant Regard..to calculate them for..Mankind in general. And of such Catholick use, I esteem this present Disquisition.
1839 H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe III. v. 453 Catholic poetry, by which I mean that which is good in all ages and countries.
1867 J. A. Froude Short Stud. 363 What was of catholic rather than national interest.
1937 Times 27 Apr. 13/2 Its [i.e. neoprene] resistance to heat and attack from oils makes it of catholic use in the motoring and aircraft industries.
2019 T. Trigoni in G. Morgese et al. Hist. Dreams & Dreaming iv. 72 De Quincey's work had a catholic appeal for a number of reasons.
B. n.
1.
a. A member of a church recognized or claiming to be ‘Catholic’ in sense A. 1b; an orthodox member of the Church before the Great Schism between Eastern and Western Churches, or any Church standing in historical continuity with it and claiming shared doctrine, system, and practice. Cf. Anglo-Catholic n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > Catholicity > [noun] > person
catholicc1425
pan-Christian1847
unsectarian1847
undenominationalist1879
ecumaniac1963
ecumenist1964
c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 277 Efter yat a king be a gude Catholyk jn his persone to godwart.
a1525 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (St Andrews) ix. l. 2701 He was a constante Catholyk, All lollaris he laythit and herrotyk.
1577 W. Fulke Two Treat. against Papistes (title page) Answere of the Christian Protestant to the proud challenge of a Popish Catholicke.
1579 J. Jones Arte preseruing Bodie & Soule Ep. Ded. sig. Aij It is..of the faithfull, Christian, and Catholike certainly beleeued.
1609 Bible (Douay) I. Proemial Annot. Some of these bookes..were sometimes doubted of by some Catholiques, and called Apochryphal.
1701 tr. J. Le Clerc Lives Primitive Fathers 241 An Edict bearing date the 27th. of February... That those who would profess it, should be called Catholics, and the others Hereticks.
1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 170 I am a Catholick of the Roman Church.
1837 J. H. Newman Parochial Serm. (1840) III. xiv The Holy Church throughout all the world is broken into many fragments..we are the English Catholics, abroad are the Roman Catholics..elsewhere are the Greek Catholics, and so on.
1860 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. (ed. 2) VI. 39 I must again remind my readers of the distinction between Catholic and Papist. Three quarters of the English people were Catholics; that is, they were attached to the hereditary and traditionary doctrines of the Church.
1872 E. A. Freeman Gen. Sketch European Hist. v. 102 He [sc. Chlodwig] became..not only a Christian but a Catholic..all the other Teutonic Kings were Arians.
1934 Evening Post (Nottingham) 24 Feb. 5/3 I am a Catholic and a Roman Catholic.
2013 J. D. BeDuhn in J. van Oort Augustine & Manichaean Christianity 6 Augustine, as a Catholic, could be taken by surprise by aspects of Manichaeism he had not full appreciated when he adhered to the system.
b. spec. A member or adherent of the Roman Catholic Church; = Roman Catholic n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Christianity > Roman Catholicism > person > [noun]
papist1528
Romanist1534
Roman1537
Romist1543
papistic1545
popestant1549
flesh-maker1551
mass-monger1551
Romish1551
Pope catholicc1554
popeling1563
catholic1570
Romish Catholic1571
popera1577
Pope worshipper1579
papane1581
Roman Catholic1581
Cacolike1582
Cartholic1582
papisha1595
Babylonian1603
papal1611
popinian1613
Papalin1616
Romulist1620
papicolist1633
western1640
papagan1641
universalist1644
red-letter man1677
RC1691
Azymite1728
papalist1752
craw-thumper1786
catholicist1812
papisher1817
pontifical1832
Romanite1839
dogan1847
mickey1851
redneck1852
mackerel-snatcher1855
Latin1867
Romanensian1885
Roman candle1897
Mick1902
Mick Dooley1905
Mickey Doo1905
left-footer1911
Pape1927
right-footer1929
Doolan1940
tyke1941
Tim1958
mackerel-snapper1960
Teague1971
Mickey Doolan1972
1551 T. Wilson Rule of Reason sig. S.viiiv As the Catholikes haue serued vs, for the Sacrament, saiyng, that because God is omnipotent, and maie bee in the Sacrament, by his power really: Ergo he is there really.
1584 in H. Foley Rec. Eng. Province Soc. of Jesus (1880) VI. 740 He said..that all English Catholics were bound to pray for the King of Spain.
1650 E. Nicholas Papers (1886) I. 180 That which has been proposed concerninge the Catholics.
1715 in E. E. Estcourt & J. O. Payne Eng. Catholic Nonjurors of 1715 (1885) 8 I, Henry Englefield, do declare that I am, by the grace of God, an English Catholic.
1734 I. Watts Reliquiæ Juveniles xi. 42 Promedon was bred in the Protestant Faith, but..being much imprest by the Discourse of an Uncle who was a devout Catholick, he began to waver.
1845 Parl. Deb. 3rd Ser. 79 820 The Irish Catholics would thank [you] infinitely more if [you] were to wipe out that foul blot.
1934 Greyhound 14 Feb. 6/3 His first teacher was a Catholic who had emigrated from Maryland.
2019 Times 26 Aug. 26/1 The Pope urged Catholics to pray that the fires are put out quickly.
2. The primate (primate n.1 1a) of any of various Eastern churches, esp. of the Armenian Church; = Catholicos n. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > patriarch > [noun] > Armenian
catholica1613
Catholicos1625
1536 T. Starkey Pref. Kynges Hyghnes f. 61 Them in Armeny..hadde amonge them their heed, whom they called their catholyke.
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions ii. x. sig. Pijv Thei had eightene Bishopries: and one Catholicque that is to saie, one generall bishoppe.
a1613 E. Brerewood Enq. Langs. & Relig. (1614) xxiv. 171 They acknowledge obedience..to two Patriarchs of their owne: whom they terme Catholiques.
1790 R. Robinson Hist. Baptism xxxv. 488 The patriarch of Antioch, who hath a colleague called the Maphrian, that is, the Catholick or primate of the East.

Phrases

Catholic (†and) Apostolic Church: a religious group formed in the 1830s which follows the teachings of Edward Irving (1792-1834), originally a minister of the Church of Scotland. Cf. Irvingite n. Now chiefly historical.The last Catholic Apostolic Church closed in the 1980s.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Christianity > other sects and movements > Irvingism > [noun] > person > collective
Catholic (and) Apostolic Church1861
1837 Testimony to Bishops, etc. 32 That no section of the baptized bears the character of the one Holy Catholic Apostolic Church.]
1838 True Apostleship not Modern i. 2 An advocate of these principles calls himself a member of ‘The Church’ or as his teachers style it ‘the Catholic Apostolic Church’.
1861 R. Norton Restoration Apostles & Proph. in Catholic Apostolic Church 159 In assuming, as our only title and name, that of ‘the Catholic and Apostolic Church’—we arrogate to ourselves nothing, for we do not appropriate it in any exclusive sense.
1966 B. Brophy Don't never Forget 309 Indirectly, the return was caused by my mother's mother, who belonged to a sect called by the outside world the Irvingites and by itself the Catholic Apostolic Church.
2009 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 12 Dec. 1381/1 His father was a minister in the Catholic Apostolic Church, founded by the preacher Edward Irving.

Compounds

C1. As a modifier, in the sense ‘relating to or favouring Roman Catholics or Roman Catholicism’. Cf. sense A. 5.
ΚΠ
1778 Gazetteer & New Daily Advertiser 3 July (heading) On the Catholic Bill.
1805 Ld. Hawkesbury (title) Speech in the House of Lords, 10th of May on the Catholic Petition.
1878 S. Walpole Hist. Eng. II. vii. 145 (note) Persons in favour of emancipation were classed as Catholic statesmen.
1929 P. Hughes Catholic Question, 1688–1829 iii. ii. 197 A re-alignment in English political life suddenly brought uncertainty to an end. With that re-alignment the Catholic Question emerges.
2021 Sunday Independent (Ireland) (Nexis) 12 Sept. From a very young age, Maria was an early supporter of Catholic Emancipation.
C2. Forming adjectives with the sense ‘that has a Catholic ——’, by combining with a noun + ed, as in Catholic-minded, Catholic-spirited, etc., and derived nouns, as in Catholic-mindedness, etc.
ΚΠ
1667 M. Mead App. to Solomon's Prescription for Removal Pestilence 27 How the most Catholick-spirited Christian can well please both, is not easie to conceive.
1837 Patriot (London) 9 Feb. 95/4 Perhaps the most catholic-minded Christian upon earth has more bigotry in him that he is aware of.
1877 Spectator 2 June 704/2 Dr. MacEwen's catholic-mindedness is well illustrated by the reply he made to his son.
1886 J. Ruskin Præterita I. x. 330 I endeavoured to entertain my Spanish-born, Paris-bred, and Catholic-hearted mistress with my own views upon the subjects of the Spanish Armada, the Battle of Waterloo, and the doctrine of Transubstantiation.
1919 Living Age 22 Nov. 495/2 I am a mild and catholic-spirited person.
2010 Times 1 Mar. 20/1 There are many Catholic-minded Anglicans like me who have wondered..whether we should become Roman Catholics.
C3.
Catholic guilt n. intense, irrational, or excessive guilt, as associated (stereotypically) with Catholics.
ΚΠ
1962 N.Y. Times Bk. Rev. 8 Apr. 6/5 If this total anonymity prevailed, then the reader..would not think, ‘If only Graham Greene weren't a convert, he wouldn't be obsessed with Catholic guilt’; he would instead notice and absorb an unusual point of view about religion.
1990 A. M. Greeley Catholic Guilt xvi. 281 Madonna..has repeatedly described the importance of Catholicism in her childhood and the remnants of Catholic guilt that continue to haunt her life—‘If you enjoy something it must be wrong.’
2020 N.Z. Herald (Nexis) 30 May c3 I sometimes work from home... But I always have this niggle at the back of my mind, I guess it could be Catholic guilt, that people might be expecting me at the office.
Catholic Seat n. Obsolete the Pope and the papal court as a single entity; the Pope in his official capacity; = Holy (also Apostolic, Papal, Roman, etc.) See. [After Byzantine Greek καθολικοὶ θρόνοι, plural.]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > [noun] > office of
keyOE
popedomlOE
apostailec1380
poperichea1387
thronec1390
papacya1393
papatea1393
see?a1400
popeheadc1410
popehoodc1410
pontificate?a1425
popeshipc1450
papality1483
pontificationa1500
pontificacy?1530
power of the keys1536
Apostolic seat1560
Catholic Seat1570
papalty1577
popedomship1588
oecumenacy1649
vice-godhead1659
chairship1660
1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) II. 927/1 The proud, cruell, & bloudy rage of the catholique seate.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2022; most recently modified version published online December 2022).
<
adj.n.c1350
随便看

 

英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/1 6:53:49