| 释义 | popen.1Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin papa.Etymology:  <  post-classical Latin papa, honorary title given to bishops (early 3rd cent. in Tertullian), honorary title given to the bishop of Rome (from early 4th cent.; almost exclusively in this sense from the end of the 8th cent.)  <  Byzantine Greek παπᾶς  , variant of ancient Greek πάππας  , later πάπας  , a child's word for ‘father’ (see papa n.2; compare papas n.). Compare Old French, Middle French, French pape   (c1050), Old Occitan, Occitan papa   (a1160), Spanish papa   (c1223), Portuguese papa   (1214), Italian papa   (late 12th cent.). An unattested post-classical Latin by-form *papes   (with ending remodelled after other words of Greek origin; compare prophetes   beside propheta  prophet n.) gave rise to Old Frisian pāves, pāus, Middle Dutch pāwes, pāus (Dutch paus), Old Saxon pāvos (Middle Low German pāwes, pāwest), Old High German bābes (Middle High German bābes, bābest, German Papst), Old Icelandic páfi, Old Swedish pave (Swedish påve), Old Danish pauæ (Danish pave).The Greek and Latin words (meaning originally ‘Father’) were, like English father   (and modern Romance equivalents), addressed or applied to spiritual fathers. In Hellenistic Greek and Byzantine Greek πάπας   (also παπᾶς  ) was applied to bishops, especially the bishops of Alexandria (from 3rd cent.) and Rome (from 4th cent.), as well as ordinary priests. Post-classical Latin papa  , used as a term of respect for ecclesiastics of high position, especially bishops, occurs in the early 3rd cent. in Tertullian, and was applied as late as 640 by St Gall to Desiderius, bishop of Cahors. But from the early 4th cent. it was in the Western Church applied especially to, and from 1073 claimed exclusively by, the bishop of Rome. With sense  6   compare German Papst, in the same sense. I.  Senses relating to people, and related uses.  1. society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > 			[noun]		β. a1200    MS Trin. Cambr. in  R. Morris  		(1873)	 2nd Ser. 163  				Þe holie lorðewes, prophetes, apostles, popes, archebissopes, [etc.].a1300						 (    Grants of Indulgences, Crediton, Devon in   		(1929)	 117  				And on oþer leon popa hit ivas[t]nede on echenisse.c1300						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Otho)	 5051  				An holy man þar was Pope.c1300    St. Dunstan 		(Laud)	 90 in  C. Horstmann  		(1887)	 22  				Þe pope and þe king Edgar.c1390						 (a1376)						    W. Langland  		(Vernon)	 		(1867)	 A. A.  viii. 8  				Part in þat pardoun þe Pope haþ I-graunted.c1450    Form Excommun. 		(Douce 60)	 in  G. Kristensson  		(1974)	 105 (MED)  				We accorsen..Also alle þat falsen þe popes letres or billes or seles.?1504    S. Hawes  sig. gg.iii  				There was saynt peter the noble pope.a1530    W. Bonde  		(1531)	  iii. f. CCxxv  				Christes vicar in erth our holy father ye pope.1581    R. Mulcaster  xxxvii. 164  				Make not all priestes that stand vpon the bridge as the Poope passeth.1624    W. Bedell  x. 138  				Paulus V. Vice-deus takes too much vpon him, when hee will bee Pope-almightie.a1651    D. Calderwood  		(1843)	 II. 187  				By vertue of the Pop's Bulls.1700    G. Farquhar   i. i. 5  				I would rather kiss her Hand than the Pope's Toe.1753    T. Gray Long Story in   15  				Tho' Pope and Spaniard could not trouble it.1830     16 Feb. 2/2  				The officers of the King's Household, and of the other royal establishments, the Pope's Nuncio, the Cardinals, the Ambassadors of Spain and Naples, were present.1861    M. Pattison in   Apr. 405  				England began to look in another quarter for support against France and the Pope.1902     23 Dec. 5/1  				Under this [crucifix] is enthroned Leo XIII, clad all in white—whence his name the White Pope—and receives the allegiance of the Red Pope (the Prefect of the Propaganda), the Black Pope (the General of the Jesuits).1959    F. O'Connor Let. 19 Aug. in   		(1980)	 347  				The Pope is not going to issue a bull condemning the Spanish Church's support of France and destroy the Church's right to exist in Spain.1994     Oct. 1/1  				Even Catholics in the pews increasingly reject the tradition of the Church and the authority of the Popes and Magisterium.α.  eOE    tr.  Bede  		(Tanner)	  iv. i. 252  				Þa wæs in þa tid Uitalius papa þæs apostolican seðles aldorbiscop. lOE     		(Laud)	 anno 1119  				He..mid ðam papan towardes Rome for. lOE     		(Laud)	 		(Peterborough contin.)	 anno 1124  				On þæs dæies  xix kalendae Ianuarii forðferde se pape on Rome Calistus wæs gehaten. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 14841  				Þas þinges weoren idone þurh þene pape of Rome. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 14847  				Of Gregorie þan pape [c1300 Otho þe pope]. ?1403    in  T. F. Simmons  		(1879)	 64  				For the pape of Rome and al his cardinals. 1483     		(BL Add. 89074)	 		(1881)	 268  				A Papes dygnite, papatus. c1550     		(1979)	 xix. 130  				Vitht out the lecens of the pape. 1567     		(1897)	 204  				The Paip, that Pagane full of pryde. 1609    J. Skene tr.  Statute Robert III in   53 b  				Induring the time of the schisme (quhilk was betwix paip Vrban the 6. and Clement the 6). 1627    H. Burton  67  				Pape and Ape differ but a letter; but their charitie to their Sonnes lesse. 1818    W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian viii, in   2nd Ser. I. 223  				I had forgot what an ill will ye had aye at the Paip. 1827    W. Tennant  13  				Clerk Diston ca'd the Paip an ass. 1895     10 601  				So too popes are always ‘paips’ and S. Maria Maggiore is ‘Mary Major’. 1917    J. Buchan  61  				It's no that I'm wi' the Pape, But I owe the warld to yon bell. 2003     		(Nexis)	 14 July 15  				A pape is what..some Scots call the pope.society > leisure > social event > festive occasion > persons and characters > 			[noun]		 > effigy in Guy Fawkes day festivities1674    G. Hickes  27  				[The Gazet] of England came full charged with the News of Burning the Pope in Effigie at London. a1684    J. Evelyn  anno 1673 		(1955)	 IV. 26  				This night the youths of the Citty burnt the Pope in Effigie after they had made procession with it. 1713    J. Arbuthnot  7  				It shall also be permitted to the said Jacob to assist at the Buying, Dressing, and burning the Pope. 1735    A. Pope Epist. to Ld. Bathurst in   II. 38  				He..heads the bold Train-bands, and burns a Pope. 1765    in   		(1766)	 III. 98  				Two men..reconciled them to one another, for other purposes I fear than burning a pope. 1828    W. Carr  		(ed. 2)	  				Pope, a long pole, to which an effigy of the Pope was attached and burnt on the 5th of Nov. 1887    W. D. Parish  & W. F. Shaw   				Popeing, to go popeing is to go round with Guy Fawkes on the 5th of November. ‘Please, sir, remember the old Pope!’ 1988    G. Lamb  at Penny  				Penny-for-the-Pope, the children of Stromness when they go round with their turnip lanterns at Halloween use this as their begging slogan. 1994     		(Nexis)	 7 Nov. 5  				They carried 17 burning crosses in commemoration of the 17 Protestant martyrs burnt at the stake in Lewes during the Marion [sic] persecutions, the reason for the town's particular glee in burning the Pope.society > leisure > social event > festive occasion > specific festivities > 			[noun]		 > festivities on Guy Fawkes day1766    J. Adams  5 Nov. 		(1961)	 I. 321  				Popes and Bonfires this Evening at Salem, and a Swarm of tumultuous People attending them. 1769     6–9 Nov. 361/2  				Description of the Pope, 1769. society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > various non-Christian superiors > 			[noun]		?a1425						 (c1400)						     		(Titus C.xvi)	 		(1919)	 205 (MED)  				In þat yle dwelleth the Pope of hire lawe, þat þei clepen lobassy. 1613    S. Purchas  542  				In this Citie dwelleth the chiefe Pope, or High Priest, of that Superstition. 1638    T. Herbert  		(rev. ed.)	 51  				(Religion of Persees) The Distoore or Pope..has 13 [precepts]. 1787    A. Hawkins tr.  V. Mignot  IV. Index  				Mufti, the Mahometan pope or chief of the religion. 1836     I. 813/2  				Those who were henceforward caliphs,..these Mussulman popes had not by any means the power of the Christian. 1897     24 Aug. 8/1  				A probability that his Majesty of Siam may soon become Pope as well as King—a Buddhist Pope. 1955     2 May 12/2  				The Caodai ‘pope’, spiritual leader of the Caodai sect. 2005     		(Nexis)	 6 Apr.  b7  				Although Islam has no formal hierarchy of clergy, Tantawy [sc. Egypt's grand imam] often is called the Muslim pope.society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > sovereign ruler or monarch > king > 			[noun]		 > alleged oriental or Ethiopian kinga1450     		(Bodl. e Mus.)	 103 (MED)  				Eche day there etyn in his court xii erchebeshopis and xx bishopis, and the patriak of Seynt Thomays is as here pope. ?c1510    tr.   sig. D  				Pope Iohn..the mooste myghtyste kynge. 4. society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > bishop > 			[noun]		1563     sig. Hh.i 		(margin)	  				All notable Bishops were then called popes. 1570    J. Foxe  		(rev. ed.)	 I. 11/1  				Ye name Pope..may peraduenture seme more tolerable, as which hath ben vsed in the olde time emong bishops. 1703    tr.  U. Chevreau  III.  v. 379  				All Bishops in that time had the Stile of Pope given them, as now we call every one of them, My Lord.society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > patriarch > 			[noun]		 > Alexandrian society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > bishop > kinds of bishop > 			[noun]		 > of Alexandria1570    J. Foxe  		(rev. ed.)	 I.  i. sig. h.ii/2  				Thys Canon and type I receaued of blessed Heraclas our Pope [margin] Heraclas called Pope, yet no bishop of Rome. 1742    T. Broughton  49  				Also Theodosians, from one among them named Theodosius, whom they made Pope at Alexandria. 1850    J. M. Neale  I. 126  				In correctness of speech,..the Patriarch of Antioch is the only Prelate who has a claim to that title: the proper appellation of the Bishops of Rome and Alexandria being Pope, of Constantinople and Jerusalem, Archbishop. 1925     7 Sept. 11  				His Beatitude the Lord Photios, Patriarch and Pope of Alexandria. 2003     		(Nexis)	 18 Aug.  a10  				The pope was born Nazeer Gayed in 1923 in Sallam in upper Egypt and graduated from Cairo University with a history degree in 1947.  5. society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > 			[noun]		 > assumption of similar authority > person1572    T. Cartwright in  C. E. Douglas  		(1907)	 144  				Caine, and Judas, and all inventors of this geare, the popes, are the children of perdition. 1589    ‘M. Marprelate’  34  				Leaue your Nonresidencie, and your other sinnes, sweete Popes now. 1689    G. Bulkeley People's Right to Election in   		(1869)	 II. 106  				We often say, that every man has a pope in his belly. 1762    H. Walpole  II. i. 41  				This Coquerel, I find by another note, was Generalis monetarius, or Pope of the mint, into which the reformation was to be introduced. 1854    in   		(1885)	 II. 40  				The family are..followers of Dr. McMill, who is the present Low-Church pope of Liverpool. 1893     19 Jan. 46/3  				Burne-Jones..accepted him [sc. Rossetti] as the infallible Pope of Art. 1972     2 June 966/2  				Both [discoveries] were rejected offhand by the popes of the field. 1993     Dec. 62/1  				[Phil] Ramone, known as ‘the Pope of Pop’ is one of the top record producer-engineers in the world.1800     3 308  				In churches that depended on the holy see, a Pope of Fools was chosen, with burlesque ornaments and ceremonies, in imitation of the real Pope. 1820    W. Scott  I. xiv. 299  				The Pope of Fools, the Boy-Bishop, and the Abbot of Unreason. 1930     11 159  				An Abbot of Fools was appointed, sometimes called the Abbot of Unreason, or the Pope of Fools. 2003     		(Nexis)	 1 Aug.  				The story starts with the celebration of the Festival of Fools in Paris, where the ugliest person around was crowned the Pope of Fools.the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > wine > drinks made with wine > 			[noun]		 > mulled wine1855    G. Emerson  		(new ed.)	 1157/1  				When made with Burgundy or Bordeaux, the mixture was called Bishop; when with old Rhenish, its name was Cardinal; and when with Tokay, it was dignified with the title of Pope. 1920    G. Saintsbury  xi. 162  				‘Pope’, i.e. mulled burgundy, is Antichristian, from no mere Protestant point of view. 1965    O. A. Mendelsohn  264  				Pope, a spiced drink made from tokay.., ginger, honey and roasted orange. 1976     15 Jan. 12/8  				Many of these hot drinks have clerical names—Bishop being a type of mulled port, Cardinal using claret, and Pope Champagne. 2003     		(Nexis)	 13 Aug. 46  				‘Bishop’ was hot spiced Bordeaux, ‘cardinal’ was hot Rhine red, and ‘pope’ was made with white tokay.  II.  Senses referring to animals. the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Percidae (perches) > 			[noun]		 > acerina cernua (ruff)1653    I. Walton  Table sig. A8v  				Directions how and with what baits to fish for the Ruffe or Pope .       View more context for this quotation 1674    N. Cox  268 		(heading)	  				Of the pope or ruff. 1696    J. Smith  93  				The Pope or Ruff, is one being in Shape, Nature and Disposition, like the Pearch, though in bigness not exceeding a large Gudgeon. ?1784    T. Shirley  vi. 95  				The Ruff, or Pope, is called by some aspredo, from the roughness of its body. 1836    F. Sykes  21  				I purchased a quantity of pope, which are much like perch. 1883     		(ed. 4)	 111  				Dace [and] Pope from Thames. 1905     Mar. 220/2  				There is an insignificant little fish..known in Britain as the pope or ruffe. 1931    E. G. Boulenger  xvi. 120  				The British representatives of the family are the Common Perch (Perca fluviatilis) and the Pope (Acerina cernua). 1980     13 Nov. 1817/2  				The [Serpentine] lake..supports..the often over-looked little cousin of the perch, the ruff or pope.the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > 			[noun]		 > Polyphaga (omnivorous) > superfamily Curculionoidea or Rhyncophora > family Curculionidae or genus Curculio > member of (weevil)1658    J. Rowland tr.  T. Moffett Theater of Insects in   		(rev. ed.)	 1086  				The English call the Wheat-worm Kis, Pope, Bowde, Weevil and Wibil. 1681    J. Worlidge Dictionarium Rusticum in   		(ed. 3)	 322  				Bouds, Weevills or Popes, Insects breeding in Malt. 1743    W. Ellis  		(ed. 2)	 259  				At Winchester they call this Insect [sc. the Weevil], Pope, Black-bob, or Creeper. 1847    J. O. Halliwell  II. 637/2  				Popes, weevils. Urry gives this as a Hampshire word, in his MS. adds. to Ray. 8. the world > animals > birds > order Charadriiformes > family Alcidae (auks) > 			[noun]		 > fratercula arctica (puffin)a1705    J. Ray Itineraries in   		(1760)	 276  				Here [sc. on Godrevy Island, Cornwall] they call the Puffins, Popes; and the Guillems, Kid-daws. 1748    L. Morris  2/2  				This is the Anas Arctica of Clusius..; and hath many English Names, as Pope, Mullet, Coulterneb, Golden-head, &c. 1894    A. Newton   				Puffin,..known as the Bottlenose, Coulterneb, Pope, Sea-Parrot. 1977    C. Maclean  		(ed. 2)	 vii. 96  				Variously known as bougirs, coulternebs, Tammie Norries or popes, puffins arrive in St Kilda in March and leave again at the end of August. 2003     		(Nexis)	 26 June 21  				Sea parrot, pipe, pope, lunde, bass cock, and ailsa cock are but some of the local names for this lovely bird .the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > family Fringillidae (finch) > 			[noun]		 > subfamily Carduelinae > genus Pyrrhula (bullfinch) the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > non-arboreal (larks, etc.) > 			[noun]		 > family Laniidae (shrike) > genus Lanius > lanius collurio1763    tr.  A. Le Page du Pratz  II. 93  				The Pope [Fr. le Pape] is a bird that has a red and black plumage. 1864     3rd Ser. 5 124/2  				Pope, Nope, Alp, Red-Hoop, and Tony-Hoop, are all provincial appellations of..the common Bullfinch. 1885    C. Swainson  47  				Red-backed shrike..Pope (Hants). 1885    C. Swainson  66  				Bullfinch... From Alp, the old name for the bird used in Ray's time, the following seem to be derived:—Hoop, or Hope... Pope (Dorset). Hope and Mwope are identical, as also Pope. 1945     Feb. 49  				The English-speaking people of New Orleans call the bird [sc. the painted bunting] ‘pop’. 1963    R. M. Nance  129  				‘Pope’ is in Dorset a bullfinch. 2001     		(Nexis)	 10 Apr. 26  				Bullfinches are known as hoops in the Westcountry, from their calls, and as mawps and popes.Phrases1959    ‘D. Stagg’  117  				‘Is he a Regular Army soldier?’.. ‘Is the Pope a Catholic?’ 1976    S. Catherine in  C. Upton  & R. Starfire  79  				Do they fry well? Is that what you are asking me???—Does the pope shit in the woods? 1991     		(Nexis)	 13 Oct. 18  				Not so long ago the question ‘How Catholic is Brazil?’ would have been as rhetorical as asking: ‘How Catholic is the Pope?’ 2002     May 33/3  				Is it hot? Is the pope a catholic? 2010    J. McGregor  		(2011)	 iv. 145  				Ben smiling that smile again and going Heather mate does the Pope shit in the woods or what?Compounds C1.   a.   Chiefly instrumental and objective. 1781    R. B. Sheridan   ii. ii. 68  				Haughty Spain's Pope-consecrated fleet.1903    E. C. Semple  i. 11  				The Spanish, acting on this pope-given right, established settlements at the mouth of the La Plata River.1556    J. Olde tr.  R. Gwalther  f. 82v  				Yon pope pleasing slaues.1907     at Pope sb.1  				Pope-powdered.1611    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas  		(new ed.)	  ii. iii. 509  				Pope-prompted Atheists, faining Superstition, To cover Cruelty, and cloak Ambition. 1907     at Pope sb.1  				Pope-prompted.  b.  1596    W. Warner  		(rev. ed.)	  ix. xlviii. 226  				But Godhoode none in Indian Golde, & pope-buld hopes shall mis.society > leisure > social event > festive occasion > specific festivities > 			[noun]		 > festivities on Guy Fawkes day1694    G. Ridpath  53  				Mr. R. having, upon reading the account of the Pope burning at London, moved it first himself to some of his fellow Students. 1757    D. Hume  II. 316  				One of the most innocent artifices..was the additional ceremony, pomp, and expence, with which a pope-burning was celebrated in London. 1873    W. D. Christie   iii. 10 		(note)	  				The pope-burnings of Queen Elizabeth's night, which had occurred every year since the excitement of the Popish Plot. 1952    J. H. Wilson  xii. 180  				Nell Gwyn entertained the residents of Pall Mall with a pope-burning under the leafless elm trees at her front door. 1999     38 34  				The same type of anti-Catholic agitation as occurred south of the border: attacks on Mass houses or the residences of prominent Catholics, and elaborate pope-burning rituals.society > faith > sect > Christianity > Roman Catholicism > person > 			[noun]		c1554    G. Menewe 		(title)	  				A Plaine subuersyon..of all the argumentes, that the Popecatholykes can make for the maintenaunce of auricular confession. 1571    J. Northbrooke  f. 48v  				Whereby our Pope catholikes may learne, that they all receaue this sacrament unworthely.1679    C. Ness  228  				The pope-conjurers, necromancers, robbers, murderers.the world > time > particular time > an anniversary > 			[noun]		 > of battles, wars, treaties, etc.1769    J. Rowe Jrnl. 6 Nov. in   		(1903)	 194  				The People have behaved Well, being Pope Day. 1825    W. Hone  		(1826)	 I. 1430/2  				‘Guy Fawkes-day’, or, as they as often call it, ‘Pope-day’, is a holiday, and.., on account of its festivous enjoyment, is the greatest holiday of the season. 1903    A. Matthews in   8 104  				It is possible that he continued to parade the streets of Boston on Pope Day. 1997     15 May 37/2  				Pope Day held into the nineteenth century in parts of America, especially New England.the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > 			[noun]		 > member of > defined by feeding or parasitism > parasite(s) > that infests grain1750    G. Hughes   iii. 84  				The Pope-fly. This Insect is better known..by the great Destruction it causes in almost every sort of Grain, than by its Shape... In general, they resemble a Wevil in their Make.society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > wind instrument > horn > 			[noun]		 > conch-shell1772     3 Feb. 3/2  				The ingenuity of some of those nocturnal Sley-frolickers, had added the Drum and Conk-shell, or Pope-horn, to their own natural, noisy, abilities.society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > 			[noun]		 > as king1860     8 Nov. 10/4  				It is personal ambition which blinds the Pope King, and urges him to oppose the national movement. 1882     46 250  				We will settle with the pontiff when we have dethroned the Pope-king. 1932    L. M. Case   ii. iv. 147  				Not long ago there had been an enthusiastic demonstration in that town [sc. Montpellier] in favor of the ‘Pope-King’. 2000     33 257 		(heading)	  				For science and for the Pope-king: writing the history of the exact sciences in nineteenth-century Rome.the world > time > particular time > an anniversary > 			[noun]		 > of battles, wars, treaties, etc.1773    J. Rowe Jrnl. 5 Nov. in   		(1903)	 254  				Very quiet for a Pope Night. 1851    J. G. Whittier in   2 Jan. 2  				We have seen the children of our Catholic neighbors as busy as their Protestant playmates in collecting, by ‘hook or by crook’, the materials for pope night bonfires. 1907     24 Oct. 376  				Until very recently, at least, the boys of Portsmouth, N.H., have celebrated Pope Night, without knowing or caring much about Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot. 2000     		(Nexis)	 11 Aug. 13 a  				Many Maine communities celebrated ‘Pope Night’ each November, with torchlight parades and a ceremonial burning in effigy of the leader of the Roman Catholic Church.1681    J. Oldham  39  				By Popes, and Pope-rid Kings upheld and lov'd. 1744    E. Elwall  20  				Pope Sylvester the First, set up that Day, and imposed it on the Nominal Pope-rid Christians.1603    S. Harsnett  xxi. 137  				To enritch their purses by selling their Pope-trumpery.society > faith > sect > Christianity > Roman Catholicism > person > 			[noun]		1579    J. Stubbs  sig. Eiij  				Who so marieth with any pope-worshipper can not tell when to be sure of him. 1600    F. Hastings  99  				I will not vouchsafe to make an Apologie for defence of those things, which you..recken vp as wrongs and iniuries offered to your Pope and Pope-worshippers. 1668    J. Durham  xiii. Lect. ii. 554  				No native Pope-worshipper, owning him and the compleat body of his doctrine, and dying so, can be saved.   2000     		(Nexis)	 24 Sept.  b1  				The Know-Nothings of the 1850s, who fought Irish immigration, attacked nunneries and called Catholics like Buchanan Bible-burners, white slavers and Pope worshippers.  C2.   Compounds with pope's . the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[noun]		 > hat > other1886    R. L. Stevenson  ii. 8  				An old red-faced general on a grey horse at the one end, and at the other the company of Grenadiers, with their Pope's-hats.society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > priest > kinds of priest > 			[noun]		 > Roman Catholic?1548     sig. Aiii  				No papiste he is nor yet the popes knught That preacheth the trueth and abhorreth the vnright. 1558    W. Mill in  J. Spottiswood  		(1655)	 95  				They call me Walter, and not Sir Walter; I have been too long one of the Popes Knights. a1709    J. Fraser  		(1905)	 186  				The Popes knights served in Inverness..But about the year 1578 [etc.]. 1795    T. Brydson  v. 175  				A title [sc. Sir] thus employed judicially, and disclaimed as characterising the pope's knights, appears to have had some other foundation, than mere courtesy. 1872    J. A. H. Murray in   Introd. p. cix  				This Sir James Inglis, a ‘Pope's Knight’, was a churchman of considerable distinction at court in the reign of James V.a1563    J. Bale  		(1969)	  ii. 129  				In the popes kychyne the scullyons shall not brawle Nor fyght for my grese. 1656    W. Bell  80  				It has been said prettily of Purgatorie, That it's a fire for warming the Pope's Kitchin. 1677    W. Hughes   iii. iv. 132  				Purgatory makes the Popes Kitching hot, and his inferior Clergies too. 1783    Mr. Lee Serm. in   VIII. xiv. 29  				You may look upon it as the grand bellows of the pope's kitchen here, and of his most beneficial laboratory, viz. purgatory.the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > other alcoholic drinks > 			[noun]		 > othersa1661    W. Brereton  		(1844)	 130  				Burnt aquavitæ and papes-milk.the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > fowls > 			[noun]		 > cuts or parts of fowl1788    F. Grose  		(ed. 2)	 (at cited word)  				Pope's Nose, the rump of a turkey. 1854    W. M. Thackeray  vii  				Giglio..picked the last bone of the chicken—drumsticks,..back, pope's nose, and all. 1916    J. Joyce  i. 32  				There's a tasty bit here we call the pope's nose. 1990     Nov. 176/3  				I was thinking of all the turkeys I'd sent to their doom, of the plucked wishbones, the pope's noses and the crisp browned skin I used to relish as a kid.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).popen.2Origin: A borrowing from Russian. Etymon: Russian pop″.Etymology:  <  Old Russian pop″ (11th cent.; Russian pop  ; compare Old Church Slavonic popŭ  , Bulgarian pop  , Polish pop  , and similar forms in most Slavonic languages), ultimately  <  Byzantine Greek παπᾶς   priest (see papas n.), although it is disputed whether the Greek word was borrowed into the Slavonic languages directly or via Old High German pfaffo   (Middle High German phaffe  , German Pfaffe  ;  <  Gothic papa   priest  <  Byzantine Greek παπᾶς  ). Gothic papa  , which was also borrowed into other Germanic languages (compare Old Frisian papa  , Middle Dutch pāpe   (Dutch paap  ), Middle Low German pāpe  , all since the Reformation denoting a Roman Catholic priest, now chiefly derogatory), appears to have been a colloquial word (compare the more literary gudja   priest ( <  the same Germanic base as god n.), the usual word in Wulfila's translation of the Bible); see further  D. H. Green Lang. & Hist. Early Germanic World (1998) 309–10. Compare earlier papas n.society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > priest > kinds of priest > 			[noun]		 > parish priest1662    J. Davies tr.  A. Olearius  139  				The other Ecclesiastical Orders are distinguish'd into Proto-popes, Popes, (or Priests) and Deacons. 1723    tr.  F. C. Weber  I. 86  				He was followed by a great number of Popes, or secular Priests, and a multitude of People. 1756     V. 202  				Every priest is called pope, which implies father. 1855     119  				Of course, you are aware that no pope can have a cure unless he be married. 1889     23 Jan. 2/3  				The Church in Hungary, with its keen party fights and its ‘popes’, whose chief function seems to be to make their parishioners dependent on their help in all the ordinary concerns of life. 1910     31 May 5/4  				The Serb Orthodox Metropolitan, with a number of popes. 1996     20 Sept. 25/5  				In the non-Roman rites diocesan priests are often referred to as popes.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).popen.3Origin: An imitative or expressive formation.Etymology: Imitative of the booming sound made by the bird's wings during its diving display flight. U.S. regional (rare ). the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Caprimulgiformes (nightjars, etc.) > 			[noun]		 > family Caprimulgidae > member of genus Caprimulgus > caprimulgus vociferus (whip-poor-will)1781    S. Peters  257  				The Whipperwill has so named itself by its nocturnal songs. It is also called the pope, by reason of its darting with great swiftness, from the clouds almost to the ground, and bawling out Pope! 1956     40 81  				Common Nighthawk... Pope (Conn[ecticut]. From the sound made by its wings while dropping through the air). This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).popev.Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pope n.1society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > act as pope			[verb (intransitive)]		1537    T. Cromwell in  R. B. Merriman  		(1902)	 II. 89  				Paul popith Jolyly, that woll desire the worlde to pray for the kinges apeyrement. 1624    R. Montagu  xiii. 95  				Vrban the eight, that now Popeth it. 1646    J. Maxwell  6  				There be..some few Patriarchs..who Lord it, and Pope it over the Lords inheritance. 1726    A. Gavin  		(ed. 2)	 136  				When Julius had poped ten Years, he died in 1513. 1783     3 9  				One Cletus, who poped it for twelve years, one month, and eleven days. 1966     Feb. 14/2  				He [sc. Pope John XXIII] would pope it in his own way, God guiding him. 1989     		(Nexis)	 24 Sept.  iii. 22/1  				I saw where the Pope poped and where the pigeons flocked. Pretty interesting if you're Catholic and like pigeons.1570    J. Foxe  		(rev. ed.)	 I. v. 511/1  				After the death of this Innocent, next was poped in the see of Rome pope Vrbane the fyft. 1628    A. Cooke  142  				Lascivious talke passed betweene an English woman, and Aeneas Sylvius (who not long after was poped, and called by the name of Pius 2.). 1828     21 June 350  				Boniface 1st, was elected in 418... Leo 1st, was Poped in 440.society > faith > sect > Christianity > Roman Catholicism > conversion to Catholicism > convert to Catholicism			[verb (intransitive)]		c1916    in  E. Waugh  		(1959)	  ii. i. 142  				I'm not going to ‘Pope’ until after the war (if I'm alive). 1954    R. Macaulay  		(1962)	 163  				I was..very sorry that your friend..has ‘poped’, as we call it here. 1966    J. Betjeman  37  				Kensit threatens and has Sam Gurney poped? 1990     7 Oct. 26/5  				A prominent Anglican priest had, to use the term generally employed on these occasions, ‘Poped’—that is, left the Church of England in order to become a Roman Catholic.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).<  n.1eOE  n.21662  n.31781  v.1537 |