释义 |
[ laz-er, ley-zer ] / ˈlæz ər, ˈleɪ zər /
nouna person infected with a disease, especially leprosy. Origin of lazar1300–50; Middle English <Medieval Latin lazarus leper, special use of Late Latin LazarusLazarus OTHER WORDS FROM lazarlaz·ar·like, adjectiveWords nearby lazarlay to rest, lay-up, lay vicar, lay waste, laywoman, lazar, lazaretto, Lazarist, Lazarus, laze, Lazear Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for lazarI urged Lazar to get his eyes back on the road, if indeed he could see it, and asked why the subject was taboo. Beware Hollywood Memoirs: They’re Dull and Overrated|Michael Korda|December 27, 2011|DAILY BEAST Lazar never minded, he would just say, “OK, how much will you give me for Gene Kelly then?” Beware Hollywood Memoirs: They’re Dull and Overrated|Michael Korda|December 27, 2011|DAILY BEAST Murad lived long enough to direct the execution in his presence of Lazar and Milosch. The Turkish Empire, its Growth and Decay|Lord Eversley Yet here, within, was a reeking house of flesh—not the lazar ward of the city slum, but the sweating den of a competitive age. Lancashire Idylls (1898)|Marshall Mather
Now you tell me, what's Uncle Lazar's whisky-jug got to do weth that? The Graysons|Edward Eggleston Lazar assured me, we should, most infallibly, be attacked on the road. The Life and Adventures of Baron Trenck|Baron Trenck As for the first two, we have seen how lazar houses were established outside every town, and how public granaries were built. The History of London|Walter Besant
British Dictionary definitions for lazar
nounan archaic word for leper Derived forms of lazarlazar-like, adjectiveWord Origin for lazarC14: via Old French and Medieval Latin, after Lazarus Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 |