| 释义 | 
		Definition of collegiate church in English: collegiate churchnoun 1A church endowed for a chapter of canons but without a bishop's see.  Example sentencesExamples -  Cathedral and collegiate churches and household chapels were staffed both by men (canons and their substitutes under many different names, numbering up to 50) and by boy choristers; nunneries deployed women's voices alone.
 -  The most famous of the relics of St. Lorenzo still existing is a small flask which allegedly contains his blood and which is venerated in the collegiate church of St. Maria in the small town of Amaseno (near Frosinone).
 -  At the south end of the historic town is Beverley Minster - before the Reformation a collegiate church - whose fittings, in particular, reflect its former prosperity.
 -  Similarly, the discussion of the collegiate churches sorts out problems of chronology and attribution becoming the best reviews available of their paintings and decoration.
 -  Often they tended vineyards adjacent to those of their bishops; collegiate churches could be founded elsewhere in the diocese as well, and they also acquired their own vineyards.
 -  The canons of the thirteen collegiate churches of his diocese were idle, or quarrelsome, or ignorant, or drunken, or lecherous, or all of the above; in his struggles to reform them, he had to invoke the help of the papal nuncio.
 -  St Valentine's remains are kept in Roquemaure's 14 th-century collegiate church.
 -  At the Reformation, Henry VIII's suppression of the monasteries and collegiate churches meant that cathedral choirs and the Chapel Royal became the main musical centres.
 -  By office, John served as one of thirty canons at Saint-Martin's, which was one of seven collegiate churches in Liege.
 -  On his return he became a Catholic priest and then became a canon in the Gothic collegiate church at St Quentin back in his home region of Picardy.
 -  To serve as the Order's chapel a collegiate church dedicated to St George was established.
 -  The opulence of such clergy as were close to the court expressed itself in the overripe late Gothic of the great collegiate churches at Stirling, Linlithgow, Rosslyn, and Perth.
 
 - 1.1Scottish, US  A church or group of churches established under two or more pastors.
 
    Definition of collegiate church in US English: collegiate churchnoun 1A church endowed for a chapter of canons but without a bishop's see.  Example sentencesExamples -  On his return he became a Catholic priest and then became a canon in the Gothic collegiate church at St Quentin back in his home region of Picardy.
 -  To serve as the Order's chapel a collegiate church dedicated to St George was established.
 -  By office, John served as one of thirty canons at Saint-Martin's, which was one of seven collegiate churches in Liege.
 -  The canons of the thirteen collegiate churches of his diocese were idle, or quarrelsome, or ignorant, or drunken, or lecherous, or all of the above; in his struggles to reform them, he had to invoke the help of the papal nuncio.
 -  The opulence of such clergy as were close to the court expressed itself in the overripe late Gothic of the great collegiate churches at Stirling, Linlithgow, Rosslyn, and Perth.
 -  Cathedral and collegiate churches and household chapels were staffed both by men (canons and their substitutes under many different names, numbering up to 50) and by boy choristers; nunneries deployed women's voices alone.
 -  At the south end of the historic town is Beverley Minster - before the Reformation a collegiate church - whose fittings, in particular, reflect its former prosperity.
 -  St Valentine's remains are kept in Roquemaure's 14 th-century collegiate church.
 -  Often they tended vineyards adjacent to those of their bishops; collegiate churches could be founded elsewhere in the diocese as well, and they also acquired their own vineyards.
 -  The most famous of the relics of St. Lorenzo still existing is a small flask which allegedly contains his blood and which is venerated in the collegiate church of St. Maria in the small town of Amaseno (near Frosinone).
 -  At the Reformation, Henry VIII's suppression of the monasteries and collegiate churches meant that cathedral choirs and the Chapel Royal became the main musical centres.
 -  Similarly, the discussion of the collegiate churches sorts out problems of chronology and attribution becoming the best reviews available of their paintings and decoration.
 
 - 1.1Scottish, US  A church or group of churches established under two or more pastors.
 
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