释义 |
adjective ˈɛldəˈɛldər 1(of one or more out of a group of associated people) of a greater age. the elder of the two sons Example sentencesExamples - My elder sister has another story which she told me when I was a child.
- So my elder sister and I suffered caning for the smallest of mistakes when we were young.
- He was one of the first icons my parents and elder siblings gifted me.
- Younger sister Meimei handles the coffee, while all dishes are prepared in advance by elder sister Wenwen, a born chef, to provide diners with quick and sumptuous meals.
- Yellow represents the young child, red the youth, blue the adult and white the elder.
- Children and teenagers usually receive angpao, a red envelope that contains money, from elder family members.
- My elder son was running in the London mini-marathon, which precedes the real thing.
- George, the elder son, was a religious and civic force in Newark.
- You can tackle your parents, elder siblings or friends for possible placements.
- Hayden portrays the power of racial hatred in an elder white man's interior.
- He was the one who wanted to sleep with his elder brother's wife.
- I'm sure others will come up with more, the heavens, just as they had done for each and every one of my elder brothers every time one of them got knocked down.
- That rule certainly applies when one's elder sibling is heir to the longest family dynasty in the world.
- My father was not attached to them, but my elder brother was.
- She agrees to apologize, and the elder Morgans promise to assist with Arnette's upcoming college expenses.
- He was an only child, and he felt Henriette very lucky in her elder siblings.
- His elder brother Ian joined the army and became a lieutenant-colonel in the SAS.
- She is to be looked after as a mother and respected as an elder sister.
- The two elder sons of the Guru courted martyrdom fighting in action for us.
- The elder son of King John, Henry was nine when his father died.
Synonyms older, senior, first, firstborn, more grown up, big - 1.1 Used to distinguish between related famous people with the same name.
Example sentencesExamples - Dowd was a White House reporter under the elder Bush.
- He is often known as William Pitt, the Elder to distinguish him from his son.
- Gaius Plinius Secondus, called Pliny the Elder to distinguish him from his nephew, known as Pliny the Younger, was born in 23 CE in Como (Northern Italy).
- One picture shows Wilson and the elder Bush walking through the White House grounds deep in conversation, 30 hours before the launch of the first Gulf war.
- As one of his final actions before leaving the White House in 1992, the elder George Bush, the father of the current president, pardoned Abrams.
noun ˈɛldəˈɛldər 1one's elderPeople who are older than one. schoolchildren were no less fascinated than their elders Example sentencesExamples - It is important to keep a sense of proportion about these things and, it seems to me, there are times when our elders and betters lose the run of themselves.
- To make Australian companies competitive, workers have to give up 100 years' worth of gains and not question what we are told to do by our elders and betters.
- Maybe my moral outlook is the result of general respect for elders and betters.
- What's worse is when these people are supposedly your elders and betters and making such a public show of it.
- Many young, bright and keen barristers would deeply resent the suggestion that they were incapable of doing the work for which their elders and betters are being so handsomely paid.
- One must respect and greet one's elders regardless of their social status.
- They aren't taught respect of their elders and betters, and that's a shame!
- We all like to find fault with our elders and betters.
- The writer is pitifully ignorant of the history of the field about which he purports to correct his elders and betters.
- This, like calculus or reading Milton, is something the undergraduates have studied and learned to do from their elders and betters.
- Respect for one's parents - and one's elders, generally - is a central value in Korean life.
- The problem with the young scallywags of today is that they don't have any respect for their elders and betters.
- Generally our messy shoulder length hair and denims invoked hostility and disdain from our elders and betters.
- They are starting to signal that to their elders and betters in the union movement, who have been brave enough to put a specific proposal to Dr Cullen in their post-election briefing.
- The only feature that does not immediately fit into this scheme is the exchange of places between the young farmhand and his more experienced elder, a regular feature of most of the texts.
- The more we hear that young adult Catholics are different from their elders in the church, the more we discover just how much they are like other Americans of all ages.
- Thank goodness that they have little or no respect for their supposed elders and betters
- The image of the First Minister sitting quietly in his place, listening to his elders and betters, describes the new relationship rather well.
- The hope is that this drama will prompt viewers to think twice about the way we view our elders and betters.
- The pupils answer back and have no respect for their elders and betters.
- 1.1one's elder A person who is older than one by a specified length of time.
she was two years his elder Example sentencesExamples - He married at age 25 a woman 15 years his elder, and stayed with her for 29 years until she died.
- He had a brother who was a Canon of Southwark Cathedral, and leaves a sister, a few years his elder, who still lives in the family house in Surrey.
2often eldersA leader or senior figure in a tribe or other group. a council of village elders Example sentencesExamples - How does my generation comprehend the fact that while the nations burns and our leaders fiddle - our elders sit, pontificate and posture?
- Over the next 10 years they are going to be out there looking for the jobs, so it's up to our leaders, elders, teachers and role models to ensure they are prepared.
- The doctor locked the residence and started to phone his relatives and tribe elders while the rest of the doctors tried to reassure as that this was nothing to worry about.
- In contrast to political leaders and elders, community intellectuals retain the better qualities of both.
- These are being run by local Muslim leaders and community elders.
- One of the tribe's elders remembered the Yawalapiti village used to be in a forest clearing near the Tuatuari River.
- In Kabul, they were handed over to village chiefs and tribal elders who pledged to support the new administration.
- It is time the elders and religious leaders within areas of this city got a hold of the unruly and offensive elements among their community's young people.
- He says he has struck deals with 250 tribes whose elders have pledged to protect lines and installations in their areas.
- Councils of chiefs and elders from a number of bands met to discuss major decisions that would affect more than one band.
- It's only a truism to say that girls are better behaved than boys but the academics note that females are more likely to go along with what elders and leading figures like teachers think.
- The village sarpanch and elders threatened to make Tarabai's life difficult if she returned to the village.
- Closest to the fire sat the village elders and leaders, then sat the able-bodied men, and the outside of the huddle consisted of the women and children.
- Towards the end of the play, through a series of monologues, the council leaders, community elders and police hint at their desire to carry on as if everything is fine.
- These people were not chosen as community leaders and the elders did not teach the community to follow these two-spirited people.
- So too is the development of promising young researchers as they move between institutions, problems and mentors, finally themselves becoming elders of the tribe.
- ‘The elders of the Hopi Tribe prophesised the coming of the rainbow people who would help heal the world,’ explained Dean.
- In the villages it is not Taliban officials who decide local issues but jirgas, small councils of village elders whose rulings are highly respected.
- The committee is designed to complement existing village authorities such as elders and local councils known as shuras.
- In addition to protecting our elders, tribes are engaged in protecting and preserving the environment.
Synonyms senior, old/older person leader, senior figure, official, patriarch, father, guiding light, guru - 2.1 An official in the early Christian Church, or of various Protestant Churches and sects.
he left the Church of which he had been an elder Example sentencesExamples - The church law which dictates that members must turn to elders rather than the police also demands that there must be two witnesses to a crime before taking any action.
- For example, Paul reminded the elders of the church of Ephesus of one saying of Jesus.
- A certain church elder's distant nephew never exhibited any interest in religion, organized or otherwise.
- In particular it emphasises the importance of training local men as church leaders, to become pastors and elders in their own churches, as soon as possible.
- Our aim is to establish churches with functioning elders and church constitutions, and a love for the Bible and one another.
- He was a known quantity to the Episcopal Church elders.
- And I will do my best to lead the elders of our church from accepting any money offered to this church from the proceeds of gambling.
- It has also made it very difficult for pastors and elders to visit church families.
- This is a succinct but thoughtful introduction to the subject of counselling and will be particularly useful to pastors, elders and other Christians involved in pastoral care.
- Sometimes it helps to have another person pray with us or to have the elders of the church pray for us during the assembly of the saints.
- George found time to be a church elder, having been ordained in 1974.
- It provides useful instruction for pastors, and describes the role and responsibilities of elders within the church.
- The elders of Walton Evangelical Church led the induction service.
- I asked the elders of our church to pray for my healing.
- Suppose the elders of our church had tried in advance to try to cover every situation.
- In many of the churches we visit, I find Masons involved as deacons, elders, board members and even pastors.
- The church made its first momentous step toward diversity when the elders of the church in Jerusalem opened the Christian movement to gentiles.
- When he arrived at Kabwata, he found a team of deacons and one elder heading the church.
- 2.2historical A member of a senate or governing body.
Example sentencesExamples - Its system of non-religious governments by elders allowed it to operate regardless of the authorities.
- The exhibition was mounted in consultation with Inuvialuit elders and community members.
- According to Mir Walijan, an aide to the Khost governor, Sabri elders had radioed the governor during the bombing for help.
- They also observed lessons in the school, visited a mosque and met local chiefs, elders and members of the wider community.
- Will the elders and policy makers take the earnest and bold message sent across by children seriously?
- Those minds can only be changed by moderate and liberal Muslims - clerics, teachers, elders, respected community members.
- They were ruled by oligarchies or councils of elders, or some mixture of the two, and might therefore best be called tribal republics.
- How should the members of this informal elders council be chosen?
- The twenty-eight elders, who were members for life, seem drawn in practice, if not by law, from a narrow range of families in the upper echelons of Spartan society.
- Residents warned they were ready to do battle with the government if a settlement is not brokered by their elders, who were meeting to find a way out of the impasse.
Derivatives noun ˈɛldəʃɪpˈɛldərˌʃɪp The Moderator has said her appointment should be a significant boost to the eldership in Scotland and to the role of women in the church. Example sentencesExamples - She congratulated him on his 40 years in the world of art and on his recent award of a staff of eldership and chief's title in the Orisha community.
- The eldership is a very strong element of our tradition and we expressed a lot of concern about the reduction in their role under the proposed new structure.
- Within two years he created an eldership and divided the duties, which left the deacons out of some decision making.
- Ian joined the eldership at West Park in June 2003.
Origin Old English ieldra, eldra, of Germanic origin; related to German älter, also to eld and old. noun ˈɛldəˈɛldər 1A small tree or shrub with pithy stems, white flowers, and bluish-black or red berries. Genus Sambucus, family Caprifoliaceae: numerous species, in particular the common Eurasian S. nigra Example sentencesExamples - In Prussia the coal of the alder, lime tree, poplar, elder, willow, hemp, and hazel is used for powder.
- The leaves have some resemblance to those of elder; hence the name.
- Places vulnerable to casual damage or vandalism will need plants which, if broken, will grow again, such as willow, alder, shrub roses and elder.
- Willows, elders and alders can be planted around the edges to soften the effect of the regimented poplars.
- The marsh gave way gradually to dry land, and the reeds and willows to hazels and elders.
- Normally elder would come into leaf in late February or March, and into blossom in late April or May.
- By the time we're eating platefuls of asparagus, the second sign of full-on spring has arrived - elderflower blossoms bursting out all over the elder tree.
- The trees include willow, cherry, poplar, acers, larch, ash, birch, sycamore, elder and sitka spruce.
- Noises tell of a nearby motorway but brambles, elders and hawthorns on each side hide all but the straight empty path ahead, until he sees a small clearing among bushes on his right.
- It connected us with a fruity hedge with brambles, rosehips, sloes, and a hundred yards of elders weighed down with berries.
- An analogy would be that, in English folklore, the elder plant has been used in countless different ways medicinally and for food.
- The most familiar use of the elder tree is probably that of the berries being cooked to make elderberry wine and various jams and jellies.
- We have tried growing variegated elder under ancient yew trees without success.
- Here, a narrow path snakes to Mayfield Pond through thick borders of meadow grass and woodland, elder, birch and hawthorn.
- At points the towpath is bordered with mature trees and thickets of elder and hawthorn, home to many different species of birds.
- A factory farm stood silent and abandoned, hedges of elders dripped berries and were decorated with white trumpets of bindweed.
- 1.1 Used in names of plants that resemble the elder in leaf or flower, e.g. ground elder.
Example sentencesExamples - Ground elder is edible and was used as a medicinal herb in the Middle Ages to cure gout.
- Scarcity of cottonwood and box elder at this elevation makes previous exposure to these hosts unlikely.
- The floodplains contained cottonwood, willow, box elder, and soft maple.
- The back half of our garden is infested with ground elder.
- Q. I have about 40 maple and box elder trees on my lot.
Origin Old English ellærn; related to Middle Low German ellern, elderne. adjectiveˈɛldərˈeldər 1(of one or more out of a group of associated people) of a greater age. the elder of the two sons Example sentencesExamples - Younger sister Meimei handles the coffee, while all dishes are prepared in advance by elder sister Wenwen, a born chef, to provide diners with quick and sumptuous meals.
- He was the one who wanted to sleep with his elder brother's wife.
- My elder son was running in the London mini-marathon, which precedes the real thing.
- Children and teenagers usually receive angpao, a red envelope that contains money, from elder family members.
- She is to be looked after as a mother and respected as an elder sister.
- George, the elder son, was a religious and civic force in Newark.
- She agrees to apologize, and the elder Morgans promise to assist with Arnette's upcoming college expenses.
- Hayden portrays the power of racial hatred in an elder white man's interior.
- The two elder sons of the Guru courted martyrdom fighting in action for us.
- So my elder sister and I suffered caning for the smallest of mistakes when we were young.
- You can tackle your parents, elder siblings or friends for possible placements.
- That rule certainly applies when one's elder sibling is heir to the longest family dynasty in the world.
- My elder sister has another story which she told me when I was a child.
- Yellow represents the young child, red the youth, blue the adult and white the elder.
- He was an only child, and he felt Henriette very lucky in her elder siblings.
- The elder son of King John, Henry was nine when his father died.
- My father was not attached to them, but my elder brother was.
- I'm sure others will come up with more, the heavens, just as they had done for each and every one of my elder brothers every time one of them got knocked down.
- He was one of the first icons my parents and elder siblings gifted me.
- His elder brother Ian joined the army and became a lieutenant-colonel in the SAS.
Synonyms older, senior, first, firstborn, more grown up, big - 1.1the Elder Used to distinguish between related famous people with the same name.
Example sentencesExamples - One picture shows Wilson and the elder Bush walking through the White House grounds deep in conversation, 30 hours before the launch of the first Gulf war.
- Gaius Plinius Secondus, called Pliny the Elder to distinguish him from his nephew, known as Pliny the Younger, was born in 23 CE in Como (Northern Italy).
- He is often known as William Pitt, the Elder to distinguish him from his son.
- As one of his final actions before leaving the White House in 1992, the elder George Bush, the father of the current president, pardoned Abrams.
- Dowd was a White House reporter under the elder Bush.
nounˈɛldərˈeldər usually elders1A person of greater age than someone specified. schoolchildren were no less fascinated than their elders take a bit of advice from your elders and betters Example sentencesExamples - Many young, bright and keen barristers would deeply resent the suggestion that they were incapable of doing the work for which their elders and betters are being so handsomely paid.
- The writer is pitifully ignorant of the history of the field about which he purports to correct his elders and betters.
- To make Australian companies competitive, workers have to give up 100 years' worth of gains and not question what we are told to do by our elders and betters.
- The problem with the young scallywags of today is that they don't have any respect for their elders and betters.
- The more we hear that young adult Catholics are different from their elders in the church, the more we discover just how much they are like other Americans of all ages.
- Maybe my moral outlook is the result of general respect for elders and betters.
- We all like to find fault with our elders and betters.
- They are starting to signal that to their elders and betters in the union movement, who have been brave enough to put a specific proposal to Dr Cullen in their post-election briefing.
- This, like calculus or reading Milton, is something the undergraduates have studied and learned to do from their elders and betters.
- They aren't taught respect of their elders and betters, and that's a shame!
- It is important to keep a sense of proportion about these things and, it seems to me, there are times when our elders and betters lose the run of themselves.
- Respect for one's parents - and one's elders, generally - is a central value in Korean life.
- The only feature that does not immediately fit into this scheme is the exchange of places between the young farmhand and his more experienced elder, a regular feature of most of the texts.
- What's worse is when these people are supposedly your elders and betters and making such a public show of it.
- Thank goodness that they have little or no respect for their supposed elders and betters
- Generally our messy shoulder length hair and denims invoked hostility and disdain from our elders and betters.
- One must respect and greet one's elders regardless of their social status.
- The hope is that this drama will prompt viewers to think twice about the way we view our elders and betters.
- The pupils answer back and have no respect for their elders and betters.
- The image of the First Minister sitting quietly in his place, listening to his elders and betters, describes the new relationship rather well.
- 1.1 A person of advanced age.
Example sentencesExamples - Legislatures in all 50 states have passed some form of elder abuse prevention laws.
- Whether it is a monarchy or military junta or some council of wise elders is something else.
- It is a welcome relief to elders on the White Earth Reservation, where the median income is less than $10,000 a year.
- But communes were dominated by factions of the older peasants, and these dominant elders not only resisted change, but also found ways to punish those who were reluctant to conform.
- The expanding senior population seems to be accompanied by a rise in elder abuse.
- He believes the solution to a national epidemic of elder abuse is the introduction of a militant Ofsted for old people's homes.
- The Western society does not treat its elders, black, white or whatever, as well as the society in the East, correct, where they are almost revered?
- When the weight loss patient is being fed by another, consider elder abuse.
- MUCH-maligned Tadcaster, home to three large breweries, is not noted for handing out advice to its so-called elders and betters - whoever they may be.
- I am delighted to receive the assumed support from that member for dealing with elder abuse in a comprehensive way.
- Family members, especially the elders, constantly ask whether I am going to marry a Christian girl or a Hindu girl.
Synonyms senior, old person, older person - 1.2often elders A leader or senior figure in a tribe or other group.
a council of village elders Example sentencesExamples - How does my generation comprehend the fact that while the nations burns and our leaders fiddle - our elders sit, pontificate and posture?
- ‘The elders of the Hopi Tribe prophesised the coming of the rainbow people who would help heal the world,’ explained Dean.
- One of the tribe's elders remembered the Yawalapiti village used to be in a forest clearing near the Tuatuari River.
- The village sarpanch and elders threatened to make Tarabai's life difficult if she returned to the village.
- So too is the development of promising young researchers as they move between institutions, problems and mentors, finally themselves becoming elders of the tribe.
- In Kabul, they were handed over to village chiefs and tribal elders who pledged to support the new administration.
- Councils of chiefs and elders from a number of bands met to discuss major decisions that would affect more than one band.
- Closest to the fire sat the village elders and leaders, then sat the able-bodied men, and the outside of the huddle consisted of the women and children.
- Towards the end of the play, through a series of monologues, the council leaders, community elders and police hint at their desire to carry on as if everything is fine.
- In addition to protecting our elders, tribes are engaged in protecting and preserving the environment.
- These people were not chosen as community leaders and the elders did not teach the community to follow these two-spirited people.
- The doctor locked the residence and started to phone his relatives and tribe elders while the rest of the doctors tried to reassure as that this was nothing to worry about.
- The committee is designed to complement existing village authorities such as elders and local councils known as shuras.
- In contrast to political leaders and elders, community intellectuals retain the better qualities of both.
- These are being run by local Muslim leaders and community elders.
- It's only a truism to say that girls are better behaved than boys but the academics note that females are more likely to go along with what elders and leading figures like teachers think.
- He says he has struck deals with 250 tribes whose elders have pledged to protect lines and installations in their areas.
- Over the next 10 years they are going to be out there looking for the jobs, so it's up to our leaders, elders, teachers and role models to ensure they are prepared.
- In the villages it is not Taliban officials who decide local issues but jirgas, small councils of village elders whose rulings are highly respected.
- It is time the elders and religious leaders within areas of this city got a hold of the unruly and offensive elements among their community's young people.
Synonyms senior, old person, older person leader, senior figure, official, patriarch, father, guiding light, guru - 1.3 An official in the early Christian Church, or of various Protestant Churches and sects.
Example sentencesExamples - Suppose the elders of our church had tried in advance to try to cover every situation.
- I asked the elders of our church to pray for my healing.
- George found time to be a church elder, having been ordained in 1974.
- A certain church elder's distant nephew never exhibited any interest in religion, organized or otherwise.
- In many of the churches we visit, I find Masons involved as deacons, elders, board members and even pastors.
- The church made its first momentous step toward diversity when the elders of the church in Jerusalem opened the Christian movement to gentiles.
- This is a succinct but thoughtful introduction to the subject of counselling and will be particularly useful to pastors, elders and other Christians involved in pastoral care.
- Our aim is to establish churches with functioning elders and church constitutions, and a love for the Bible and one another.
- He was a known quantity to the Episcopal Church elders.
- And I will do my best to lead the elders of our church from accepting any money offered to this church from the proceeds of gambling.
- When he arrived at Kabwata, he found a team of deacons and one elder heading the church.
- For example, Paul reminded the elders of the church of Ephesus of one saying of Jesus.
- In particular it emphasises the importance of training local men as church leaders, to become pastors and elders in their own churches, as soon as possible.
- The elders of Walton Evangelical Church led the induction service.
- It provides useful instruction for pastors, and describes the role and responsibilities of elders within the church.
- The church law which dictates that members must turn to elders rather than the police also demands that there must be two witnesses to a crime before taking any action.
- It has also made it very difficult for pastors and elders to visit church families.
- Sometimes it helps to have another person pray with us or to have the elders of the church pray for us during the assembly of the saints.
Origin Old English ieldra, eldra, of Germanic origin; related to German älter, also to eld and old. nounˈeldərˈɛldər A small tree or shrub with pithy stems, typically having white flowers and bluish-black or red berries. Genus Sambucus, family Caprifoliaceae: numerous species, in particular the common North American S. canadensis and the Eurasian S. nigra Example sentencesExamples - Here, a narrow path snakes to Mayfield Pond through thick borders of meadow grass and woodland, elder, birch and hawthorn.
- The trees include willow, cherry, poplar, acers, larch, ash, birch, sycamore, elder and sitka spruce.
- In Prussia the coal of the alder, lime tree, poplar, elder, willow, hemp, and hazel is used for powder.
- Willows, elders and alders can be planted around the edges to soften the effect of the regimented poplars.
- The marsh gave way gradually to dry land, and the reeds and willows to hazels and elders.
- It connected us with a fruity hedge with brambles, rosehips, sloes, and a hundred yards of elders weighed down with berries.
- Places vulnerable to casual damage or vandalism will need plants which, if broken, will grow again, such as willow, alder, shrub roses and elder.
- We have tried growing variegated elder under ancient yew trees without success.
- A factory farm stood silent and abandoned, hedges of elders dripped berries and were decorated with white trumpets of bindweed.
- Normally elder would come into leaf in late February or March, and into blossom in late April or May.
- The most familiar use of the elder tree is probably that of the berries being cooked to make elderberry wine and various jams and jellies.
- By the time we're eating platefuls of asparagus, the second sign of full-on spring has arrived - elderflower blossoms bursting out all over the elder tree.
- The leaves have some resemblance to those of elder; hence the name.
- Noises tell of a nearby motorway but brambles, elders and hawthorns on each side hide all but the straight empty path ahead, until he sees a small clearing among bushes on his right.
- An analogy would be that, in English folklore, the elder plant has been used in countless different ways medicinally and for food.
- At points the towpath is bordered with mature trees and thickets of elder and hawthorn, home to many different species of birds.
Origin Old English ellærn; related to Middle Low German ellern, elderne. |