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单词 transubstantiate
释义

transubstantiateadj.

Forms: Also Middle English–1600s transs-.
Etymology: < medieval Latin tran(s)substāntiātus, past participle of tran(s)substāntiāre : see transubstantiate v.Previous versions of the OED give the stress as: ˌtransubˈstantiate.
Obsolete or archaic.
Transubstantiated. (Mostly construed as past participle)
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > sacrament > communion > eucharistic doctrines > transubstantiation > [adjective] > characterized by
transubstantiatec1450
transubstantiated?1550
transelementate1583
the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > [adjective] > changed in substance or essence
reducta1398
redact?a1475
transubstantiated?1550
reduceable1565
transubstantiate1848
transessentiate1852
c1450 Mirour Saluacioun 1886 Be the preest is brede to fflesshe Transsubstanciate.
a1536 W. Tyndale Briefe Declar. Sacraments (?1548) C vij [They say] the breade and wyne are changed, turned, altered and transsubstancyat in to the very body and bloud of Chryste.
1550 T. Cranmer Def. Sacrament f. 30 Yt holdeth, that breade is transubstantiate or tourned into the bodye, and wyne into the bloudde.
1571 T. Fortescue tr. P. Mexia Foreste 43 Sutche mercilesse and transubstantiate monsters.
1598 R. Dallington View of Fraunce sig. B iij He had transubstantiate this fat Fowle into fish.
1678 R. Barclay Apol. True Christian Divinity xiii. §5. 459 The Bread, and..the Wine..which they say is Consecrate and Transubstantiate into the very Body of Christ.
1848 C. Kingsley Saint's Trag. i. ii. 194 To find the canvas warm with life, and matter A moment transubstantiate to heaven.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

transubstantiatev.

/trɑːnsəbˈstanʃɪeɪt//transəbˈstanʃɪeɪt/
Forms: Also transsubstantiate.
Etymology: < participial stem of medieval Latin tran(s)substāntiāre (Du Cange), < trans- prefix + substāntia substance n. Compare French transsubstantier (14th cent. in Godefroy Compl.). Apparently first used in past participle: compare transubstantiate adj.
a. transitive. To change from one substance into another; to transform, transmute.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > transform [verb (transitive)] > in substance or essence
transubstantiate1584
fishify1597
transubstantialize1647
transessentiate1675
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft iii. xi. 58 She [sc. a witch] confesseth that she transubstantiateth hir selfe.
1615 W. Lawson Country Housewifes Garden (1626) 19 The sap..is consolidated and transubstantiated into the substance of the tree.
1670 J. Pettus Fodinæ Regales 44 The Philosophers stone..which would..transubstantiate other Metals into..Gold and Silver.
a1711 T. Ken Wks. (1721) I. 98 He Water transubstantiated to Wine.
1870 T. H. Huxley Lay Serm. (1877) 133 A singular inward laboratory, which I possess, will..convert the dead protoplasm into living protoplasm, and transubstantiate sheep [i.e. mutton] into man.
b. spec. in Theology: see transubstantiation n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > sacrament > communion > eucharistic doctrines > transubstantiation > perform transubstantiation [verb (transitive)]
transubstantiate1533
transcorporate1570
transmake1844
c1450 Mirour Saluacioun 1886 Be the preest is brede to fflesshe Transsubstanciate.]
1533 W. Tyndale Souper of Lorde B iij The wyne transsubstanciated into his bloud.
a1600 R. Hooker Learned Disc. (1612) 15 As..transubstantiation of..sacramentall elements in the Eucharist.
1651 C. Cartwright Certamen Religiosum i. 122 After Consecration there is no longer the substance of Bread, but that the Bread is transubstantiated, and turned into the substance of Christs Body.
a1774 A. Tucker Light of Nature (1834) II. 483 It is necessary the priest should call down His very body crucified upon the cross into the bread; which must be transubstantiated thereinto, or consubstantiated therewith.
a1819 G. Hill Lect. Divin. (1821) III. 362 The practice of partaking in private of a small portion of what the priest has thus transubstantiated.
c. transferred and figurative.
ΚΠ
1641 R. Greville Disc. Nature Episcopacie 71 So large that no one man..could sufficiently visit and over-see it except he get the Pope to Transubstantiate him also and so get a Vbiquitarian Body.
1675 J. Owen Div. Origin Authority Script. in Wks. (1851) VIII. 499 A private doctor of the Church of Rome may thus transubstantiate blasphemy into piety.
1760 L. Sterne Life Tristram Shandy II. ix. 63 Never was a Dr. Slop so beluted, and so transubstantiated.
1884 J. Tait Mind in Matter 99 Hints are transubstantiated into conceptions.
d. absol.
ΚΠ
1579 W. Fulke Heskins Parl. Repealed in D. Heskins Ouerthrowne 67 Ye Papistes call consecrating, to change ye substances, or to transubstantiat.
1641 R. Greville Disc. Nature Episcopacie ii. iii. 74 A Preist can Consecrate, and by Consecration Transubstantiate.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost v. 438 With keen dispatch Of real hunger, and concoctive heate To transubstantiate . View more context for this quotation
e. intransitive for passive. To become transubstantiated.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > sacrament > communion > eucharistic doctrines > transubstantiation > believe in transubstantiation [verb (intransitive)] > of elements: undergo
transubstantiate1851
1851 W. Anderson Exposure Popery (1878) 84 If the cake be not genuine in respect of wheaten flour, and if the wine have been made of immature grapes, they will not transubstantiate.

Derivatives

transubˈstantiated adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > [adjective] > changed in substance or essence
reducta1398
redact?a1475
transubstantiated?1550
reduceable1565
transubstantiate1848
transessentiate1852
society > faith > worship > sacrament > communion > eucharistic doctrines > transubstantiation > [adjective] > characterized by
transubstantiatec1450
transubstantiated?1550
transelementate1583
?1550 J. Bale Apol. agaynste Papyst 63 Those transubstanciated Goddes, were knowne for no Goddes.
1654 Bp. J. Taylor Real Presence 47 The spiritual eating of him..may be done without their Transubstantiated flesh.
1721 J. Chamberlayne tr. B. Nieuwentyt Relig. Philosopher (new ed.) I. ii. v. 16 A metamorphosed or transubstantiated Earth.
1849 J. Stephen Ess. Eccl. Biogr. (1850) I. 82 His faltering lips had closed on the transubstantiated elements.
transubˈstantiating n. and adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > sacrament > communion > eucharistic doctrines > transubstantiation > [noun]
trans-substancingc1380
transubstantiation1533
turnkind1548
adduction1638
transubstantiating1800
carnification1826
transubstantialization1830
transubstantialism1842
transelementing1855
transfinalization1965
transignification1965
1800 W. Taylor in Monthly Mag. 10 319 Scarcely marvellous enough for his transubstantiating fancy.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online June 2021).
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adj.c1450v.1533
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