| 释义 | 
		Definition of abbé in English: abbénoun ˈabeɪabeaˈbā (in France) an abbot or other cleric.  the abbé was his confessor  Example sentencesExamples -  In France their leader was the abbé Jules Lemire, who was elected to parliament from a Flemish constituency in 1893.
 -  He attended the Jesuit College in Amiens, studying under the abbé Jacques Delille who was a poet and classicist.
 -  It is possible to detect the influence of Jansenism through the presence of two leading draftsmen of the Civil Constitution, abbés Grégoire and Camus.
 -  In his revolutionary pamphlet of 1788, the abbé Sieyès lamented the great respect granted this parasitic existence.
 -  Chapter two follows with an analysis of the economic resources of ‘Dalmatia’ through the work of the abbé Alberto Fortis.
 -  Jean Picard, who also was an abbé, held Mouton in high esteem and always visited him when in Lyons.
 -  We also would like to thank l' abbé René Chartier, Soeur Rioux and Soeur Forest for all their support and prayers.
 -  The late abbé Galiani was absolutely right to compare our Council of Finance to Christmas Eve, when everyone eats too much and finishes up with violent indigestion.
 -  The sly abbé from Périgord takes Candide to the theatre.
 -  The French abbé de Saint Pierre went even further, noting that the power of states simply fluctuated too much for such an idea to be feasible.
 -  Educated by a Jansenist-leaning abbé, Tocqueville did not lose his faith lightly.
 
 
 Origin   Mid 16th century: French, from ecclesiastical Latin abbas, abbat- (see abbot).    Definition of abbé in US English: abbénounaˈbā (in France) an abbot or other cleric.  the abbé was his confessor  Example sentencesExamples -  The sly abbé from Périgord takes Candide to the theatre.
 -  Educated by a Jansenist-leaning abbé, Tocqueville did not lose his faith lightly.
 -  Chapter two follows with an analysis of the economic resources of ‘Dalmatia’ through the work of the abbé Alberto Fortis.
 -  He attended the Jesuit College in Amiens, studying under the abbé Jacques Delille who was a poet and classicist.
 -  It is possible to detect the influence of Jansenism through the presence of two leading draftsmen of the Civil Constitution, abbés Grégoire and Camus.
 -  In his revolutionary pamphlet of 1788, the abbé Sieyès lamented the great respect granted this parasitic existence.
 -  The French abbé de Saint Pierre went even further, noting that the power of states simply fluctuated too much for such an idea to be feasible.
 -  In France their leader was the abbé Jules Lemire, who was elected to parliament from a Flemish constituency in 1893.
 -  Jean Picard, who also was an abbé, held Mouton in high esteem and always visited him when in Lyons.
 -  The late abbé Galiani was absolutely right to compare our Council of Finance to Christmas Eve, when everyone eats too much and finishes up with violent indigestion.
 -  We also would like to thank l' abbé René Chartier, Soeur Rioux and Soeur Forest for all their support and prayers.
 
 
 Origin   Mid 16th century: French, from ecclesiastical Latin abbas, abbat- (see abbot).     |