请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 rectory
释义

rectoryn.

Brit. /ˈrɛkt(ə)ri/, U.S. /ˈrɛkt(ə)ri/
Forms: late Middle English– rectory, 1500s rectorie, 1500s rectorye; Scottish pre-1700 rectorie, pre-1700 1700s– rectory.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French rectorie; Latin rectoria.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French rectorie benefice held by an (ecclesiastical) rector (14th cent.), office of rector of a university (1407), residence of an (ecclesiastical) rector (a1412 in Anglo-Norman) and its etymon post-classical Latin rectoria rectorship of a university (1249, 1410), office of rector of a province (1263, 1282, 1311, etc.), benefice held by an (ecclesiastical) rector (frequently from 1271 in British sources), residence of an (ecclesiastical) rector (from 14th cent. in British sources) < classical Latin rector rector n. + -ia -y suffix3. Compare Old Occitan rectoria (15th cent.), Catalan rectoria (1397), Spanish rectoría (late 15th cent.), Italian rettoria (1280 as rectoria).
1.
a. A benefice held by a rector. Cf. vicarage n. 1a.Earliest in rectory book n. at Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > benefice > kinds of benefice > [noun] > parson's
parsonagec1400
rectory1448
vicarage1501
rectorage1556
1448 Acct. in Berks, Bucks & Oxon Archæol. Jrnl. (1907) 13 51 (MED) Item, for mendyng of ye Rectory boke, i d.
?1535 Public Gen. Acts (title) An acte..touchyng order and disposition of the tenthes, of spirituall and ecclestiasticall promotions, and of rectories.
1588 in D. Cook Ann. Pittenweem (1867) 11 Be the tenor of the said charter erects ane rectorie or personage in the every ane of the said kirks.
1613 H. Spelman De non temerandis Ecclesiis in Eng. Wks. (1723) i. 1 A Rectory, or Parsonage, is a Spiritual Living, composed of Land, Tythe, and other Oblations of the People [etc.].
1677 Act 29 Chas. II c. 8 §2 The said Vicars and Curates shall have remedy for the same either by Distress upon the Rectories Impropriate or Portions of Tythes charged therewith.
1708 E. Hatton New View London II. 484/1 The Living is a Rectory, the Advowson in the Bp. of London.
1765 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. I. xi. 374 When the clerk so presented is distinct from the vicar, the rectory thus vested in him becomes what is called a sine-cure.
1804 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. IV. 299 The tenant for life demised the rectory, which consisted of tithes only, reserving a rent.
1886 Law Times Rep. 53 702/2 The sums payable to Dr. Cox out of the income of the united rectory.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 696/1 In 1840 Bishop Blomfield of London..presented him to the rectory of Launton, Oxfordshire, which he resigned in 1850.
1932 Cambr. Hist. Jrnl. 4 44 Valuable rectories..were likely to be held by non-resident clergy who paid relatively small salaries to the priests whom they appointed to take their places.
2003 Church Times 19 Dec. 31/5 His seven sons were rewarded by their doting father with no fewer than 16 rectories, vicarages and chapelries, besides preacherships and cathedral dignities.
b. The residence of a rector. Cf. vicarage n. 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > clerical residence (general) > other clerical residences > [noun] > rector's
parsonagec1410
rectory1549
parsonage house1563
1549 Articles Visitation Byshopricke Norwyche Article xiv Whether all maner proprietaries, persones, vicars and clerkes..doo keepe theyr chauncelles, rectories, and all other howses apperteynyng to theym.
1556 Articles Visitation Dioces Caunterbury in J. Foxe Actes & Monuments (1583) II. 1969/1 Whether the sayd Parsons and Uicars do sufficiently repayre theyr Chauncels, Rectoryes, and vicarages, and do keep and mayntein them sufficiently repayred and amended.
1788 A. Seward Eyam in Poet. Wks. (1810) III. 3 To the deserted Rectory I pass;..Where childhood's earliest, liveliest bliss I found.
1794 W. Combe Hist. Principal Rivers Great Brit. I. 262 The rectory is a spacious house, of an agreeable appearance, situate on the descent of an hill.
1814 W. Scott Waverley I. ii. 17 A Weekly Intelligencer, which..was regularly transferred from the hall to the rectory . View more context for this quotation
1859 ‘G. Eliot’ Adam Bede I. i. xvi. 312 Arthur gave his horse to the groom at the Rectory gate.
1909 Chatterbox 6/2 A horseman called upon him at the rectory to ask the way to Lowestoft.
1939 G. B. Gilbert Forty Years Country Preacher 77 The new rectory was both beautiful and expensive, but it proved to be a great headache.
1992 Condé Nast Traveler Mar. 554/2 Another marriage of God and mammon is the Old Rectory Association, whose members offer dinner plus bed and breakfast in former rectories.
2. An educational establishment or religious institution under the control of a rector. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > place of education > school > [noun] > other types of school
writing schoola1475
rectory1536
spelling school1704
greycoat1706
rural school1734
Charter School1763
home school1770
Philanthropine1797
British school1819
side school1826
prep school1829
trade school1829
Progymnasium1833
finishing-school1836
field schoola1840
field school1846
prairie school1851
graded school1852
model school1854
Philanthropinum1856
stagiary school1861
grade school1869
middle school1870
language school1878
correspondence school1889
day continuation school1889
prep1891
Sunday school1901
farm school1903
weekend school1907
Charter School1912
folk high school1914
pre-kindergarten1922
Rabfak1924
cram-shop1926
free school1926
crammer1931
composite school1943
outward-bound1943
blackboard jungle1954
pathshala1956
Vo-Tech1956
St. Trinian's1958
juku1962
cadre school1966
telecentre1967
academy2000
academy school2000
1536 Act 27 Hen. VIII c. 42 §1 Emolumentes..apperteynyng..unto the said Houses, Howses Collegiate, Rectories, Halles, Hostelles etc. within the said Universities of Oxford and Cambridge.
1695 T. Tanner Notitia Monastica Pref. sig. b5 There were another Order of Canons of the Austin Rule in England called Bonhommes or Good-men; They were first brought into this Kingdom A. D. 1283..and placed in a Rectory or College founded by Edmund Earl of Cornwall.
1876 Cook's Tourist's Handbk. for Black Forest 112 To the north of Sigmaringen lies Gorheim, where, till lately, there was a Jesuit rectory, with fifteen fathers.
1903 Times, Lit. Suppl. 2 Oct. 280/1 He was sent away to be tutored in English rectories, whence he proceeded to University College, London.
1919 J. E. H. Thomson Mem. T. Dunlop ii. 19 All that remained of the Rectory or Pedagogy, that in pre-Reformation days represented the later University.
1971 Jrnl. Inter-Amer. Stud. & World Affairs 13 2 Andreoni took over the Jesuit rectory in Bahia in 1697.
3. Originally Scottish. The position of rector, rectorship; (hence) administration. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > [noun]
onwaldeOE
wissingc1000
governc1300
shield1338
governaila1382
governancec1384
hierarchy1390
regimenta1393
rulea1393
rulec1405
governationc1410
leadingc1430
governmentc1450
gubernance1455
domination1490
moderation1526
governancy1540
ditiona1552
ruledom1553
rectory1572
sway1586
diocese1596
raj1857
society > education > educational administration > university administration > [noun] > rector at Scottish university > office of
rectory1572
rectorship1582
pro-rectorate1815
1572 J. Knox Let. 5 Aug. in Wks. (1864) VI. 621 The office of Rectory of ane University or Provest of a Colledge.
1640 in Rep. Comm. Univ. Scot. (1830) 114 The..office of Rectorie sall consist in the free and ample exerceis of the articlis underwriten.
1660 R. Burney Κέρδιστον Δῶρον 131 Princes receive a singular Spirit of God for the Rectory of Iustice.
1675 R. Burthogge Cavsa Dei 144 The day of Judgement..: when all Administration, Government, and Rectory shall cease.

Compounds

rectory book n. (apparently) a parish register or a book in which events relating to a particular parish are recorded.In quot. 1448 at sense 1a perhaps an account book for a parish.
ΚΠ
1448*Rectory boke [see sense 1a].
1886 Southern Churchman 22 Apr. 2/6 The rectory book of St. Paul's parish..has been..long lost from public view.
2002 D. Dymond in C. Harper-Bill et al. East Anglia's Hist. 87 Parsons who fought to defend their rights. A good example is provided in the Rectory Book of Robert Shelford, Laudian rector of Ringsfield cum Redisham Parva in north-east Suffolk.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
n.1448
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:2024/9/23 19:20:34