释义 |
mimbar|ˈmɪmbɑː(r)| Also 9 mambar, monbar, 9– minbar (the best form). [Arab. minbar pulpit.] The pulpit in a mosque. Also attrib.
1816Travels of Ali Bey II. vi. 84 El Monbar, or The Tribune of the Priest of Fridays, is on one side of the Makam Ibrahim, at fourteen feet distance, and in front of the northern angle of the Kaaba. 1836E. W. Lane Acct. Manners & Customs Mod. Egyptians I. iii. 94 To the right of this [sc. the mihrab] is the mim'bar (or pulpit). 1839T. J. Newbold Pol. & Statistical Acct. Straits of Malacca I. v. 249 The Khatib..recites the Khatbeh..in the mosque, from the three steps of the mimbar, a species of rostrum. 1855R. F. Burton Pilgrimage II. xvii. 141 The Mambar, or pulpit, was the invention of a Medinah man of the Beni Najjar. 1875Encycl. Brit. II. 446/2 Near this was a pulpit (mimbar). 1885T. P. Hughes Dict. Islam 349 Minbar, generally pronounced mimbar... The pulpit in a mosque from which the khuṭbah (or sermon) is recited. It consists of three steps, and is sometimes a moveable wooden structure, and sometimes a fixture of brick or stone built against the wall. 1932Times Lit. Suppl. 10 Nov. 840/1 The charming panels in the side walls of the mimbar steps at the Ravali Masjid. 1967V. Pritchard Eng. Medieval Graffiti 35/1 There is a whole panel of swastika-peltae, in a simplified form, carved on a wooden mimbar in Kairwan, North Africa. |