mendicant查询结果如下:

mendicant monk
托钵僧
属类:科技术语
- - -
juvenile mendicant
行乞儿童
属类:社会文化
-社会福利 - -
juvenile mendicant
少年乞丐
属类:社会文化
-公共安全 - -
a mendicant Buddhist monk
化缘和尚
属类:综合句库
- - -
Memoirs of a Mendicant Professor
托钵教授回忆录
属类:文化媒体名称
-书名 - -
The one-legged mendicant begins to beg from door to door.
独腿乞丐开始挨门乞讨。
属类:英汉句库--
Carmelite:a monk or mendicant friar belonging to the order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, founded in 1155.
加尔默罗会修道会:成立于1155年的加尔默罗修道会,隶属于卡梅尔山的圣母玛丽亚教团.
属类:综合句库-未分类-
It appeared that a bohemian, a bare-footed vagabond, a sort of dangerous mendicant , was at that moment in the town
据说有一个游民,一个赤脚大汉,一个恶叫化子这时已到了城里。
属类:综合句库--
He was a miserable scamp, a sort of mendicant musician, a lazy beggar, who beat her, and who abandoned her as she had taken him, in disgust
那人是一个穷汉,一个流浪音乐师,一个好吃懒做的无赖,他打她,春宵既度,便起了厌恶的心,把她丢了。
属类:综合句库--
A member of a religious mendicant order founded by Saint Francis of Assisi in1209and now divided into three independent branches.
圣方济各会修士或修女1209年由圣方济各建立、现已分作三个独立分支的一宗教行乞修道团的成员
属类:综合句库--
He seemed not an ordinary mendicant .
他好像不是寻常的乞丐。
属类:英汉句库--
A Hindu ascetic or religious mendicant ,especially one who performs feats of magic or endurance.
托钵僧印度教的禁欲主义者或托钵僧,尤指具有非凡的技艺和忍耐力的
属类:综合句库--
A member of a usually mendicant Roman Catholic order.
托钵修会修士常化缘的罗马天主教会成员
属类:综合句库--
A Moslem religious mendicant .
行者穆斯林的托钵僧
属类:综合句库--
Long after this, in a street in Bolpur, a mendicant Baul was singing as he walked along
很久以后,在鲍尔普尔的一条街上,一个行乞的歌手一面走一面唱
属类:英汉句库-article.yeeyan.org-
|adjective|
1.Given to begging.
‘Out on the sidewalk of Pacific Avenue, Santa Cruz's main shopping street, the normal carnival of pedestrians, loiterers, court jesters, fools, and _mendicant_ troubadours milled and mingled on a warm spring afternoon.’
‘Possibly it was sheer vanity and love of easily-won applause that drove him to act out the role of _mendicant_ campus guru.’
2.Of or denoting one of the religious orders who originally relied solely on alms.
‘a _mendicant_ friar’
‘Originally, the community of bhikus was a _mendicant_ order which travelled extensively, other than during the rainy season, and required only limited necessities.’
|noun|
1.A beggar.
‘Eighty mendicants, we are told, sat down each day at her table, and blessed her name.’
‘With a cloth over his mouth to prevent his breath from inhaling any airborne creature, he spent the following nine years as a wandering, barefoot _mendicant_ .’
2.A member of a mendicant order.
‘Such tunics were deliberately patched and made ragged to indicate their wearers' status as religious mendicants.’
‘Verastique's study is, at best, a broad text-book like survey of pre-Hispanic religion and culture and of the Christianization programs of mendicants and diocesan clergy.’
独上高台望四海 手揽云月傍天飞, 落叶重重已十月 归鸟凄凄啼心扉。
