| 释义 |
ubiq·ui·ty \-wəd.ē, -wətē, -i\ noun (-es) Etymology: Latin ubique everywhere (from ubi where + -que, enclitic generalizing particle) + English -ity; akin to Oscan puf where, Latin quis who and to Latin -que and — more at who, sesqui- 1. : the theological doctrine formulated by Luther that Christ's glorified body is omnipresent 2. : presence everywhere or in many places especially simultaneously : omnipresence < the ubiquity of the printed word — Reinhold Niebuhr > < the ubiquity of unreliable editions — Abram Chasins > < achieved a certain ubiquity by shuttling back and forth in hot and dusty trains — Agnes & W.E.Hocking > |