释义 |
Definition of Vulgate in English: Vulgatenoun ˈvʌlɡətˈvʌlɡeɪt 1The principal Latin version of the Bible, prepared mainly by St Jerome in the late 4th century, and (as revised in 1592) adopted as the official text for the Roman Catholic Church. Example sentencesExamples - The texts were taken from the Vulgate and elaborated with original material, while the stories were essentially dramatic - Jonah and the Whale, the Judgment of Solomon, and so on.
- In fact you would find in most English-speaking countries that the churches and congregations would tend to use the English translations of the Psalms rather than the traditional Latin Vulgate.
- The subversive power of printing is illustrated by Martin Luther's translation of the Latin Vulgate (15??)
- Westcott claimed that the English Bible was greater than the Vulgate because nobody had died for the latter.
- The James translation became the Vulgate, and the translation done for Thomas Aquinas by William Moerbeke never received much usage.
2in singular Common or colloquial speech. I required a new, formal language in which to address him, not the vulgate Example sentencesExamples - The poem goes from the poet's gibberish to the gibberish of the vulgate and back again.
- There is nothing particularly progressive, as Dan Atkinson & Larry Elliot point out in The Age of Insecurity, in a European Union in which the prerogatives of a brutal neoliberalism form the current vulgate.
- Myles na gCopaleen was just one of the pen-names used by a gentleman from Strabane in the county Tyrone named Brian O Nuallain, or just plain Brian O'Nolan in the vulgate.
- For the uninitiated, Myles na gCopaleen was just one of the pen-names used by a gentleman from Strabane in the county Tyrone named Brian Ó Nualláin, or just plain Brian O'Nolan in the vulgate.
- Womanism is feminism's vulgate, found everywhere, from the humorous disparagement of men by stand-up comedians and novelists through to more savage criticisms of men in the context of fears of social disintegration.
- And he impacts so directly not because the public understands greatness in a way that the literary establishment doesn't (or, as critics suggest, because King has access to a mystical vulgate that ‘proper’ novelists can't or won't use).
Origin From Latin vulgata (editio(n-)) '(edition) prepared for the public', feminine past participle of vulgare, from vulgus 'common people'. Definition of Vulgate in US English: Vulgatenoun 1The principal Latin version of the Bible, prepared mainly by St. Jerome in the late 4th century, and (as revised in 1592) adopted as the official text for the Roman Catholic Church. Example sentencesExamples - The subversive power of printing is illustrated by Martin Luther's translation of the Latin Vulgate (15??)
- The James translation became the Vulgate, and the translation done for Thomas Aquinas by William Moerbeke never received much usage.
- The texts were taken from the Vulgate and elaborated with original material, while the stories were essentially dramatic - Jonah and the Whale, the Judgment of Solomon, and so on.
- In fact you would find in most English-speaking countries that the churches and congregations would tend to use the English translations of the Psalms rather than the traditional Latin Vulgate.
- Westcott claimed that the English Bible was greater than the Vulgate because nobody had died for the latter.
- 1.1vulgate A commonly recognized text or edition, as of the Iliad.
2vulgatein singular Common or colloquial speech. I required a new, formal language in which to address him, not the vulgate Example sentencesExamples - Myles na gCopaleen was just one of the pen-names used by a gentleman from Strabane in the county Tyrone named Brian O Nuallain, or just plain Brian O'Nolan in the vulgate.
- For the uninitiated, Myles na gCopaleen was just one of the pen-names used by a gentleman from Strabane in the county Tyrone named Brian Ó Nualláin, or just plain Brian O'Nolan in the vulgate.
- Womanism is feminism's vulgate, found everywhere, from the humorous disparagement of men by stand-up comedians and novelists through to more savage criticisms of men in the context of fears of social disintegration.
- There is nothing particularly progressive, as Dan Atkinson & Larry Elliot point out in The Age of Insecurity, in a European Union in which the prerogatives of a brutal neoliberalism form the current vulgate.
- The poem goes from the poet's gibberish to the gibberish of the vulgate and back again.
- And he impacts so directly not because the public understands greatness in a way that the literary establishment doesn't (or, as critics suggest, because King has access to a mystical vulgate that ‘proper’ novelists can't or won't use).
Origin From Latin vulgata (editio(n-)) ‘(edition) prepared for the public’, feminine past participle of vulgare, from vulgus ‘common people’. |