单词 | traditionary |
释义 | traditionaryn.adj. A person who accepts, adheres to, or maintains the authority of, tradition; a traditionalist. Obsolete.Often with reference to religion, in early use pejorative. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > tradition > [noun] > adherent traditioner1555 traditionary1564 traditionist1584 traditionalist1660 society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > customs, values, or beliefs of a society or group > [noun] > transmitted from one generation to another > adherence to > one who traditioner1555 traditionary1564 traditionist1584 traditional1656 traditionalist1660 mouldy fig1950 trad1956 trad1960 1564 T. Becon Actes Christ & Antichrist f. cccxcviiiv, in Wks. iii Antichrist to enlarge his kingdome taketh vnto him innumerable swarmes of Hipocrites, as Cardinalles,..Traditionaries, Papistes, &c. 1587 J. Harmar tr. T. de Bèze Serm. xxviii. 379 That which the Prophets haue written against the hypocrites and traditionaries of their time. 1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage ii. xii. 145 The likenesse of these Traditionaries, Cabalists, muddie Talmudists, and Legendaries.., and the like manner of their confusion, hath almost made mee forget the Historie and my selfe. 1697 W. Jameson Nazianzeni Querela ii. ii. 121 The whole Counsel of God is delivered, which Opinion is much fitter for a Jewish Cabalist or Romish Traditionary than a Protestant Doctor. 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. (at cited word) The Traditionaries are what we more usually call Rabbins, or Talmudists... Hillel shone among the Traditionaries, and Schammai among the Textuaries. 1791 W. Enfield Brucker's Hist. Philos. II. iv. i. 175 The Scripturists were a party distinct from the Traditionaries. 1848 R. G. Parker Outl. Gen. Hist. 44 Two parties, called respectively Sectaries and Traditionaries. 1882 Christian Church Mar. 65/2 Anything that makes it irrational and dishonest in us ‘traditionaries’ to believe any more that the Bible is history. 1903 Metaphysical Mag. July 453 These things only serve to set the hide-bound traditionaries against him. B. adj. Now rare. 1. a. Of, belonging to, or of the nature of tradition; = traditional adj. 1a. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > customs, values, or beliefs of a society or group > [adjective] > traditional traditional1545 well-hallowed1576 traditionary1584 traditive1602 traditious1612 traditory1646 traductive1657 transmitted1794 tralatitious1795 handed-down1801 tralaticiary1900 trad1955 1584 J. Rainolds Six Concl. in J. Rainolds & J. Hart Summe of Conf. 668 What they [sc. the Papists] can not finde in Gods writen worde, they may cauill that is [sic] was ordered by Gods traditionarie word. 1661 J. Glanvill Vanity of Dogmatizing 249 Traditionary impositions. a1676 M. Hale Judgm. True Relig. (1684) i. 2 By Traditionary Transmission of many important Truths..from Ancestors to their Posterity. 1749 D. Hartley Observ. Man ii. iv. 396 The corrupted Remains of some traditionary Revelation. 1794 R. J. Sulivan View of Nature IV. lxx. 353 All we have is a meagre fragment, a traditionary tale. 1802 W. Paley Nat. Theol. xviii. 329 What can be the traditionary knowledge of a chicken hatched in an oven? 1869 W. E. Gladstone Juventus Mundi ii. 41 The traditionary, as opposed to the merely mythical, period. 1945 A. Huxley Perennial Philos. p. vii Rudiments of the Perennial Philosophy may be found among the traditionary lore of primitive peoples in every region of the world. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > legend or folk tale > [adjective] legendary1570 legendous1686 traditional1794 traditionary1794 1794 R. J. Sulivan View of Nature IV. lxviii. 245 Turk, his son, succeeded him [sc. Japhet]; and this is the traditionary root of the nation called Turks or Tartars. 1835 E. Greswell Expos. Parables I. 442 I see the vestiges of a traditionary paradise in this dream of the poets. 1840 T. Hood Up Rhine 288 Some two hundred yards distant stood the mill, in an Arabian waste, as remote from corn as the traditionary Mill of Buccleugh. 1921 J. T. Adams Founding New Eng. (1922) v. 108 There is no such proof of the traditionary settlement by Hilton, until 1628, although it is accepted by the earlier historians. c. Characterized by or associated with tradition. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > customs, values, or beliefs of a society or group > [adjective] > traditional > characterized by traditionary1827 1827 B. Disraeli Vivian Grey III. v. i. 5 Once more upon thy banks, most beauteous Rhine!..Thy spreading waters—thy traditionary crags. 1844 R. M. Milnes Palm Leaves 2 'Tis well to live and lord o'er those By whom his sires were most renown'd, But his fierce heart finds best repose In this traditionary ground. 1998 P. Loptson Readings on Human Nature ix. xliv. 517 A fundamental distinction between two kinds of societies, approximately traditionary and contractual ones. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > customs, values, or beliefs of a society or group > [adjective] > traditional > adhering to traditional1597 traditionary1613 tradition-bound1660 tradition-loving1660 tradition-ridden1660 traditionalist1854 1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage iii. x. 247 They [sc. the Turkes] hate the Persians,..more then they doe the Christians: like as the Traditionary Iew doth the Textuarie, and the Papist the Protestant. 1666 J. Tillotson Rule of Faith iii. x. 287 Himself and his Traditionary Brethren. 1701 G. Stanhope Evid. Jewish & Christian Faith Compared (new ed.) 13 It hath been objected, not by Jews only, but some Traditionary Christians too..that..we debate the nature and excellence of Faith, and make it no longer Divine, but merely Humane. 1742 R. Biscoe Hist. Acts Holy Apostles I. iv. 93 There was a Variety of Opinions concerning the Resurrection among the Pharisees, or traditionary Jews. 1838 ‘Misopapisticus’ Lett. Writings Fathers First Two Cent. 270 No grave, long-faced remonstrance from traditionary men, will ever make him repent of what he has done. 1845 Davenport (Iowa) Gaz. 31 July 2/1 This ceremony, doubtless, would appear pantomimic..but after a full interpretation of their proceedings they would be found in character with this traditionary people. 1911 F. Lynde Price xxvi. 281 He believes he can commit what the traditionary people call a crime without paying the penalties. Derivatives traˌditio'narily adv. now rare = traditionally adv. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > customs, values, or beliefs of a society or group > [adverb] > by tradition traditionately1593 traditionally1600 traditio'narily1624 translatitiously1643 1624 S. Jerome Irelands Iubilee iii. xv. 214 Let the day of our preservation..be ingraven..in the Tablets of our gratefull hearts, perpetuated traditionarily to our Childrens children. 1713 C. Place Heretical Char. ii. 187 The Catechumens..had it [sc. the Apostles Creed] traditionarily taught and deliver'd to them. 1804 W. Mitford Inq. Princ. Harmony Lang. (ed. 2) xv. 347 The antient Welsh airs, which have been transmitted traditionarily by ignorant harpers. 1937 Life 5 July 44/1 His [sc. Renoir's] father was, traditionarily, a poor tailor. 2007 H. Jisheng in D. F. Mayor Electroacupuncture p. xi The interests of acupuncturists who are traditionarily trained and those with a Western medical training will also be very different. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.adj.1564 |
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