| 单词 | aulic | 
| 释义 | aulicadj.n. A. adj.   Of, relating to, or associated with a court or chamber, in various senses; (also) courtly. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > judicial body, assembly, or court > 			[adjective]		 tribunala1555 forensical1566 aulic1596 aulical1602 forensala1638 forensic1647 forensivea1670 1596    A. Copley Fig for Fortune 16  				In quaint disdaine of aulicke infant games. 1647    J. Leciester England's Miraculous Preserv. 		(single sheet)	  				Threats, Promises, and Protestations, Aulick Libels, Lyes, and Defamations. 1694    P. A. Motteux tr.  F. Rabelais 5th Bk. Wks. Epist. Lymosin 249  				An aulic Life no solid Joys can give. 1761    Gen. Evening Post 22 Oct.  				Aulic Counsellor and one of the Principal Physicians to her Most Sacred Majesty the Empress-Queen. 1853    T. De Quincey Writings XII. 142  				Investing the..homeliness of Æsop with aulic graces and satiric brilliancy. 1863    Q. Rev. July 4  				The business of the [Austrian] State was conducted in a number of court offices or aulic chancellorships. 1957    East & West 8 313/1  				Many other works which claim to be classics are more or less artificial and often aulic verse. 1997    Papers Brit. School Rome 65 261  				The preoccupation with antique Roman models which is a recurring characteristic of Lombard and Carolingian aulic culture. 2005    P. Kearns Freedom of Artistic Expression iv. 69  				In the aulic setting of law, art charged with being obscene is seen doubly out of context.   In the college of the Sorbonne: a ceremony forming part of the procedure for granting the degree of doctor of divinity, in which the new doctor is addressed by the chancellor, receives a cap as a mark of status, and then presides at a formal disputation. Obsolete.Such ceremonies took place at the college before it was suppressed during the French Revolution. ΚΠ 1678    in  Miscellanea 		(Catholic Rec. Soc.)	 		(1917)	 11 104  				Mr Betham took his Doctors Cap, Mr George Witham making ye Expectative and Aulick. 1771    Encycl. Brit. I. 508/1  				Aulic, in the Sorbonne and foreign universities, is an act which a young divine maintains upon being admitted a doctor in divinity. Compounds  Aulic Council  n. now historical 		 (a) (in the Holy Roman Empire) the personal council of the emperor;		 (b) (in the Austrian Empire) a council charged with managing the war department.				 [Probably after post-classical Latin consilium aulicum (1622 or earlier), consilium aulicum imperiale (1680 or earlier); compare German Hofrat, lit. ‘court council’ (1501 or earlier) and (with reference to the Holy Roman Empire) Reichshofrat (1559 or earlier) and also French conseil aulique (1647 or earlier; now historical).]			 ΚΠ 1679    A. Moetiens tr.  Articles of Peace in  Coll. Acts, Memorials, & Lett. Nimeguen 233  				Henry Stratman, of his Imperial Majesty's Aulick Council. 1701    London Gaz. No. 3719/3  				Baron Seylern..has notified to the Imperial Diet the Decrees of the Aulick Council. 1801    Caledonian Mercury 31 Jan.  				It appears by letters from Vienna, that the Archduke Charles has been appointed Imperial Field-Marshal of the Austrian forces, and President of the Aulic Council. 1902    Cambr. Mod. Hist. I. 327  				The Aulic Council became the rival of the imperial Chamber. 2002    Amer. Hist. Rev. 107 1039  				The monks complained to the Imperial Aulic Council in Vienna, which in 1605 ruled in their favor. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2017; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < | 
| 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。