单词 | pontificality |
释义 | pontificalityn. 1. a. A pontificate; the papacy. Cf. pontificate n. 1. rare after 18th cent. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > bishop > [noun] > office of bishopdoma887 bishophoodc1000 bisprichea1300 thronec1390 mitrea1393 seea1393 bishopric1394 pontificality?a1425 chair1480 bishopry1535 episcopality1636 episcopate1641 episcopacy1685 lawna1732 cathedra1863 ?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (N.Y. Acad. Med.) f. 44 Þis we see..in þat huge..mortalite..Of the pontificaltee [?c1425 Paris popedome] of þe 6a. Ser Clement þe 6a. ȝere. 1556 J. Olde tr. R. Gwalther Antichrist f. 89v The 40 daye of his pontificalitie. 1581 M. Hanmer Iesuites Banner 19 Places where the Pope dareth not once peepe, for all hys Pontificalitye at Rome. 1631 G. C. tr. P. Du Moulin Learned Treat. Trad. xxviii. 410 All the lawes touching the administration of the Seven Sacraments, and the disciplines of the Romish Pontificallity. 1641 Parallel between Wolsey & Laud in Harl. Misc. (1809) IV. 465 By which he might make so vain-glorious a shew of his pontificality, or archiepiscopal dignity. a1656 J. Ussher Judgem. See of Rome (1659) 20 When the Pontificality was first set up in Rome. 1789 H. Ainsworth Arrow against Idolatry in Two Treat. v. 322 It is the invention of the pope's wit, whereby in policy he would maintain the pomp and magnificence of his Diana, and in her his own pontificality. 1997 TASS (Nexis) 19 Dec. Over the 19 years of his pontificality, John Paul II has already made 80 trips abroad. 2000 N.Y. Press 29 Mar. i. 9/2 Once, during the Great Schism of the West (1378–1417), Pope Gregory XII and two antipopes, Benedict XIII and John XXIII disputed pontificality. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > [noun] > office of prelacya1387 pontificals?a1475 officialshipc1475 bishopric1520 high priesthood1535 superintendence1561 prelateship1570 pontificality1593 officiality1597 prelature1602 prelation1611 prelaty1641 pontificacy1665 pontificate1702 officialty1720 presulate1853 1593 G. Harvey Pierces Supererogation 83 How the Principalitie, or Pontificalitie of a Minister according to the degenerate Sanedrim, should be sett-vpp. 1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage vi. xii. 532 One Marvan seized on the Pontificality. 1651 ‘A. B.’ tr. L. Lessius Sir Walter Rawleigh's Ghost 211 As if Moses and Aaron had ambitiously sought the Principality and Pontificality. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > [noun] > collectively prelacya1393 Lords Spiritual1404 pontificala1450 pontificality1486 prelatry1641 prelature1820 1486 Bk. St. Albans sig. F vij A Pontificalite of prelatis. ΘΚΠ society > faith > artefacts > vestments > clothing of particular functionaries > [noun] > bishop pontificals?1435 pontificalibusa1533 pontificalitya1538 pontificalia1577 pontificials1606 a1538 W. Holme Fall & Euill Successe Rebellion (1572) sig. F.ijv Was the holy Ghost..with him that tooke out of his graue Formosus, And dight him in a chayre in his pontificalitie. 1601 J. Deacon & J. Walker Summarie Answere to Darel To Rdr. sig. *6 Like a pettie new Pope among his owne Cardinals;..and that also in his pontificalities. 1611 T. Coryate Crudities sig. E7v He himselfe was that day in his sumptuous Pontificalities. 1655 T. Bayly Life J. Fisher iv. 37 To notifie unto the world, the great authority, wherein the Cardinall was invested, and that he might be seen sitting in his Pontificality. 4. depreciative. A grand, stately, or haughty demeanour. Now usually: arrogance; dogmatism; pomposity. rare before mid 20th cent. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pride > pomposity > [noun] pompositya1538 ventosity?1545 pontificality1600 bigness1634 fast1673 swell1724 bumbledom1847 highfalutin1847 highfalutination1858 pompousness1870 largeness1887 falutin1921 hugaboo1930 stuffed-shirtedness1981 fantasia- 1600 J. Melville Diary 245 Placing himselff besyde me with a grait pontificalitie and big countenance. 1931 Times 14 Aug. 6/1 Any passionate revolution—political like the French; economic, like the Russian—proceeds to climb the pulpit and arrogate the pontificality of universality. 1941 Amer. Econ. Rev. 31 244 That academic pontificality, that assertiveness of fundamental creed, that unreasonable sensitiveness to criticism which both of them displayed. 1990 Jerusalem Post (Nexis) 26 June (Op-Ed section) Clearly, control of the tube nurtures not only ignorance but pontificality. ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > observance, ritual > kinds of rite > pontifical > [noun] pontificals1691 pontificality1841 1841 T. Carlyle On Heroes iii. 160 All cathedrals, pontificalities, brass and stone,..are brief in comparison to an unfathomable heart-song like this. 1858 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia II. vi. vi. 97 A Public Mass, or some other so-called Pontificality. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.?a1425 |
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