释义 |
benefice
ben·e·fice B0186400 (bĕn′ə-fĭs)n.1. Ecclesiastical a. A church office endowed with fixed capital assets that provide a living.b. The revenue from such assets.2. A landed estate granted in feudal tenure. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin beneficium, benefit, from beneficus, benefic; see benefic.] ben′e·fice v.benefice (ˈbɛnɪfɪs) n1. (Ecclesiastical Terms) Christianity an endowed Church office yielding an income to its holder; a Church living2. (Ecclesiastical Terms) the property or revenue attached to such an office3. (Historical Terms) (in feudal society) a tenement (piece of land) held by a vassal from a landowner on easy terms or free, esp in return for military support. See also vassalagevb (Ecclesiastical Terms) (tr) to provide with a benefice[C14: from Old French, from Latin beneficium benefit, from beneficus, from bene well + facere to do]ben•e•fice (ˈbɛn ə fɪs) n., v. -ficed, -fic•ing. n. 1. a position or post granted to an ecclesiastic that guarantees a fixed amount of property or income. 2. the revenue itself. 3. the equivalent of a fief in the early Middle Ages. v.t. 4. to invest with a benefice. [1300–50; Middle English < Middle French < Latin beneficium service, kindness; see benefic, -ium 1] benefice Past participle: beneficed Gerund: beneficing
Imperative |
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benefice | benefice |
Present |
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I benefice | you benefice | he/she/it benefices | we benefice | you benefice | they benefice |
Preterite |
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I beneficed | you beneficed | he/she/it beneficed | we beneficed | you beneficed | they beneficed |
Present Continuous |
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I am beneficing | you are beneficing | he/she/it is beneficing | we are beneficing | you are beneficing | they are beneficing |
Present Perfect |
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I have beneficed | you have beneficed | he/she/it has beneficed | we have beneficed | you have beneficed | they have beneficed |
Past Continuous |
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I was beneficing | you were beneficing | he/she/it was beneficing | we were beneficing | you were beneficing | they were beneficing |
Past Perfect |
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I had beneficed | you had beneficed | he/she/it had beneficed | we had beneficed | you had beneficed | they had beneficed |
Future |
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I will benefice | you will benefice | he/she/it will benefice | we will benefice | you will benefice | they will benefice |
Future Perfect |
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I will have beneficed | you will have beneficed | he/she/it will have beneficed | we will have beneficed | you will have beneficed | they will have beneficed |
Future Continuous |
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I will be beneficing | you will be beneficing | he/she/it will be beneficing | we will be beneficing | you will be beneficing | they will be beneficing |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been beneficing | you have been beneficing | he/she/it has been beneficing | we have been beneficing | you have been beneficing | they have been beneficing |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been beneficing | you will have been beneficing | he/she/it will have been beneficing | we will have been beneficing | you will have been beneficing | they will have been beneficing |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been beneficing | you had been beneficing | he/she/it had been beneficing | we had been beneficing | you had been beneficing | they had been beneficing |
Conditional |
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I would benefice | you would benefice | he/she/it would benefice | we would benefice | you would benefice | they would benefice |
Past Conditional |
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I would have beneficed | you would have beneficed | he/she/it would have beneficed | we would have beneficed | you would have beneficed | they would have beneficed | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | benefice - an endowed church office giving income to its holderecclesiastical beneficechurch property, spirituality, spiritualty - property or income owned by a churchsinecure - a benefice to which no spiritual or pastoral duties are attached | Verb | 1. | benefice - endow with a beneficedower, endow - furnish with an endowment; "When she got married, she got dowered" | Translationsbenefice
benefice (bĕn`əfĭs), in canon law, a position in the church that has attached to it a source of income; also, more narrowly, that income itself. The occupant of a benefice receives its revenue (temporalities) for the performance of stipulated duties (spiritualities), e.g., the celebration of Mass. He receives the free use of such revenue but is expected to convert into good works any income in excess of his personal needs. Benefices are normally bestowed for life. Canon law forbids plurality of benefices, i.e., the holding of more than one benefice, but papal dispensations have made many exceptions to this rule. Benefices were originally in the form of land donations made to the church by wealthy laymen. Today the revenue of a benefice may come also from government salaries, investments, or the offerings of the faithful. Benefices are common in Europe but are practically unknown in the United States. The Church of England makes extensive use of the beneficiary system; the benefice in England is also called a living. The value of benefices led to many abuses (see simonysimony , in canon law, buying or selling of any spiritual benefit or office. The name is derived from Simon Magus, who tried to buy the gifts of the Holy Spirit from St. Peter (Acts 8). Simony is a very grave sin, and ecclesiastics who commit it may be excommunicated. ..... Click the link for more information. ) and frequent conflict between secular and ecclesiastical authorities in the Middle Ages.benefice - (in contemporary usage) a living from a church office or the property attached to a church.
- (historically, and in sociology) the institution in Western European feudalism whereby a vassal was given land or a position by an overlord from which the vassal could gain an income. Especially where land was involved, more commonly this was known as a fief. See FEUDALISM AND FEUDAL SOCIETY.
Benefice (1) In ancient Rome, some kind of privilege, as for example, one granted to a debtor and, during the empire period, also various tax exemptions, grants bestowed by emperors, and so forth. (2) In Western Europe in the early Middle Ages, the benefice in its classical form was a temporary grant, usually of land, in return for performance of administrative or military service. The classical benefice came into use in the Frankish kingdom after the benefice reform of Charles Mar-tel in the 730’s. According to this reform, gifts of land, which were earlier considered the unconditional property of great lords or vassals, were replaced by grants bestowed only as a benefice for lifelong use, primarily in return for military service. This formalized the territorial relations within the emerging feudal landlord class. As the practice of granting benefices, which came with the peasants dwelling on that land, became widespread, it led to increased dependence of the peasants upon the landholders and to a concentration of military and political power in the hands of the ruling class. Benefices served as the economic base underlying feudalism’s hierarchy. Owners of benefices gradually succeeded in turning their lifelong grants into hereditary feudal property, or fiefs. There was a certain similarity to the West European benefice in the milost’ (favor) and later the po-mest’e (estate) in Russia and, in the Arab countries, in the ikta (before they acquired a hereditary character). (3) The ecclesiastical benefice, in the Catholic church, is the awarding of a profitable post to a clergyman. During the Middle Ages there was a struggle between the clerical and secular authorities over the right to dispose of ecclesiastical benefices, which included tracts of land. For example, such a struggle occurred between the emperors of the Holy Roman Empire and the papacy over the question of investiture in the 11th and 12th centuries. A. IA. SHEVELENKO benefice1. Christianity an endowed Church office yielding an income to its holder; a Church living 2. the property or revenue attached to such an office 3. (in feudal society) a tenement (piece of land) held by a vassal from a landowner on easy terms or free, esp in return for military support Benefice Related to Benefice: repined, profanersBENEFICE, eccles. law. In its most extended sense, any ecclesiastical preferment or dignity; but in its more limited sense, it is applied only to rectories and vicarages. benefice Related to benefice: repined, profanersSynonyms for beneficenoun an endowed church office giving income to its holderSynonymsRelated Words- church property
- spirituality
- spiritualty
- sinecure
verb endow with a beneficeRelated Words |