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单词 pontifical
释义

pontificaln.adj.

Brit. /pɒnˈtɪfᵻkl/, U.S. /pɑnˈtɪfᵻk(ə)l/
Forms: late Middle English pontyfycale, late Middle English pontyfycalle, late Middle English–1500s pontificalle, late Middle English–1500s pontyficall, late Middle English–1600s pontificall, late Middle English– pontifical, 1500s pomtifical (transmission error), 1500s pontificale, 1500s pontifycalle.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French pontifical; Latin pontificalia, pontificale, pontificālis.
Etymology: As noun < Anglo-Norman and Middle French, French pontifical the robes of a bishop or priest (c1270 or earlier in Anglo-Norman), a book or manuscript containing the liturgical rites and ceremonies to be performed by a bishop or pope (1374 in Middle French) and its etymon post-classical Latin pontificalia (plural) episcopal vestments (7th cent.; frequently from 12th cent. in British sources), pontificale service-book (from 1296 in British sources), uses as noun of neuter plural and singular respectively of pontificalis , adjective (see below). As adjective < Anglo-Norman and Middle French, French pontifical of, relating, or appropriate to the office or dignity of a bishop or pope (1269 in Old French), relating to the pontifices of ancient Rome (a1380), prestigious (1404) and its etymon classical Latin pontificālis of or belonging to a pontifex or the college of pontifices, in post-classical Latin also of or relating to a bishop (4th or 5th cent. in Jerome), of or relating to the Pope (6th cent.) < pontific- , pontifex pontifex n. + -ālis -al suffix1. Compare slightly earlier pontificality n.
A. n.
1.
a. In plural. The robes of a bishop or priest; the vestments and insignia of a bishop, cardinal, or other high-ranking cleric.†Formerly also in singular (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > vestments > clothing of particular functionaries > [noun] > bishop
pontificals?1435
pontificalibusa1533
pontificalitya1538
pontificalia1577
pontificials1606
?1435 ( J. Lydgate Minor Poems (1934) ii. 646 (MED) There to mete him..was the Erchebisshop and the Chaunceller, Lyncoln and Bathe..In pontyficall arrayed richely.
a1500 (c1400) St. Erkenwald (1977) 130 (MED) Þe prelate in pontificals was prestly atyride.
1559 in C. Innes Registrum Episcopatus Aberdonensis (1845) I. App. 89 Item the pontificall, viz. a chesabill, 4 tunicks, 3 stols.
?1590–1 J. Burel Discription Queens Entry Edinb. in Poems sig. M2v The vther Burgissis forby, Wer cled in thair pontificall.
1660 Bp. J. Taylor Ductor Dubitantium I. ii. ii. 308 For a Bishop to ride on hunting in his Pontificals..is against publike honesty.
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 176/2 The true shape and depiction of a Bishop in his Pontificals.
1714 A. D. Chancel New Journey Europe 24 The Archbishop that officiates, being in his Pontificals, anoints hi Head.
1774 J. Adams in J. Adams & A. Adams Familiar Lett. (1876) 37 Next morning he [sc. an Episcopal clergyman] appeared with his clerk and in his pontificals, and read several prayers.
1828 Times 2 Dec. 3/1 The Abbot St. Brenard, dressed in pontificals.
1851 D. Wilson Archæol. & Prehistoric Ann. Scotl. ii. vi. 317 The archpriest when robed in his most stately pontificals.
1907 W. W. Capes Reg. Thome de Cantilupo Introd. p. xxii The Dean and Chapter held in trust for the See certain pontificals which were to be handed down from one to another of its Bishops.
1980 Church Times 21 Nov. 12 They stripped off his clothes to put on the full pontificals for burial.
b. A pontiff's ring; (also) a ring or other piece of jewellery resembling this. Now historical and rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > vestments > sartorial appurtenances > [noun] > ring
regal of Francec1440
pontificala1500
fisher's ring1689
fisherman's ring1728
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > types of ornamentation > jewellery > ring > [noun] > other types of ring
kine-ringc1225
pontificala1500
hoop-ring1545
death's head1577
ring of remembrance1659
serjeant's ring1690
garter-ring1709
bath-ring1771
solitaire1832
regard ring1853
key ring1856
bodylet1870
portrait ring1877
tower-ring1877
whistle-ring1877
marquise1885
princess-ring1886
dinner ring1890
cluster ring1897
eternity ring1939
a1500 Inventory in Archaeologia (1890) 52 214 (MED) Hys Miter & crose beyng Redy wt hys glovys and pontyfycalle.
1507 in J. Raine Testamenta Eboracensia (1869) IV. 319 For a pontificall put upon my lordes fynger in tym of sering [= cering] xvj d.
1508 Will of Joan Hampton (P.R.O.: PROB. 11/15) f. 279 A peyre of owches otherwise callid pontificalles of siluer & gilt.
1551 J. Williams Acct. Monastic Treasures (1836) 48 Gloves, ringes, caled pontifycalles, and two Gospell bookes.
1921 Trans. Sc. Ecclesiol. Soc. 149 A ring described as his larger pontifical is set with a Sapphire surrounded by balas rubies.
2.
a. A bishop or other church dignitary. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > bishop > [noun]
bishopc897
patriarcheOE
bispa1300
ordinarya1325
ordinar?1403
father1418
discretion1421
pontificalc1440
diocesanc1450
rocheter1559
monseigneur1561
pope1563
bite-sheep1570
presul1577
rochet1581
diocesser1606
lawn sleevesc1640
episcopant1641
Right Reverend1681
diocesian1686
lawn-man1795
diocesiarch1805
bish1875
shire-bishop1880
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 4335 Relygeous reueste in theire riche copes, Pontyficalles and prelates in precyouse wedys.
c1475 tr. C. de Pisan Livre du Corps de Policie (Cambr.) (1977) 53 (MED) Ther be many of our pontificalles and prestes in whiche is seyn opynly grete plente of horrible defawtis.
b. A company or group of (esp. ecclesiastical) dignitaries. Cf. pontificality n. 2. Obsolete.One of many alleged group names found in late Middle English glossarial sources, but not otherwise substantiated.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > [noun]
bishopc893
prelate?c1225
prince of priests?c1225
high priestc1400
pontificala1450
emperor clerkc1475
gentleman untrial1486
dignitya1525
Aaron1565
hierarch1574
presul1577
monsignor1579
church governor1588
pontiff1589
archbishop1600
monseigneur1601
monsignor1611
sheikh1613
protomist1619
Mar1622
hyperochality1637
protarch1654
pontifex1655
prelatical1658
dignitary1672
hierophanta1676
Monsig.1698
ecclesiarch1781
arch-pontiff1790
Mgr1848
Msgr.1868
patriarch-
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > [noun] > collectively
prelacya1393
Lords Spiritual1404
pontificala1450
pontificality1486
prelatry1641
prelature1820
a1450 Terms Assoc. in PMLA (1936) 51 604 (MED) A pontificalle of prynces, a pontificalle of prelatys.
c1475 in J. Hodgkin Proper Terms (1909) 52 (MED) A Pontyfycalle of Prestysse.
?1478 Lydgate's Horse, Goose & Sheep (Caxton) (1822) 31 A pontifical of prelates, a state of princes, a dignite of chanons.
c. depreciative. With capital initial. An adherent or supporter of episcopacy, pontifical ceremony, etc., in the Anglican Church, esp. during the reign of Elizabeth I. Cf. puritan n. 1a. Obsolete. rare (historical in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > [noun] > adherent of
subjectc1350
pontifical1591
pontifician1612
pontificial1631
papa-prelatist1816
1591 H. Barrow Plaine Refut. Giffardes Bk. 134 Herehence ariseth these schismes and sectes in the Church of England..these are herevpon called Precitians, or Puritanes, and nowe lately Martinistes. The other opposite side are the Pontificales.
?1591 H. Barrow Brief Discouerie False Church 189 The Pontificals proceed yet further to open their mouthes vnto more accursed blasphemie.
1874 L. Bacon Genesis New Eng. Church xviii. 403 The ‘Pontificals’ were never called ‘forward preachers’ either by Puritans or by Separatists.
3. In plural: †the offices or duties of a bishop (obsolete rare). In later use (in singular): a ceremonial rite or observance celebrated pontifically; a pontifical mass. Also: †the office of a pope or other high-ranking cleric (obsolete rare).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > [noun] > office of
prelacya1387
pontificals?a1475
officialshipc1475
bishopric1520
high priesthood1535
superintendence1561
prelateship1570
pontificality1593
officiality1597
prelature1602
prelation1611
prelaty1641
pontificacy1665
pontificate1702
officialty1720
presulate1853
society > faith > worship > observance, ritual > kinds of rite > pontifical > [noun]
pontificals1691
pontificality1841
society > faith > worship > sacrament > communion > mass > kinds of mass > [noun] > pontifical
pontificals1923
?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1872) IV. 405 To fullefille the ministery off pristes to the peple..and notte the pontificalles [a1387 J. Trevisaoffice of bisshoppes; L. pontificalia].
1567 Compend. Bk. Godly Songs (1897) 178 Thocht thow be Paip or Cardinall, Sa heich in thy Pontificall.
1621 R. Montagu Diatribæ Hist. Tithes 459 Hee was..skilfull in the Romane Histories, Religion, Pontificals, and Ceremonies.
1691 A. Gavin Frauds Romish Monks (ed. 3) 223 She had been so extreamly satisfi'd with the Pontifical, which had been celebrated with so much Pomp and Majesty.
1744 W. Wilkes Let. Advice Young Lady 36 The other attributes great Merit to certain Dresses, Postures, Pontificals, and Ceremonies.
1923 R. Seton Memories Many Years 291 The most interesting of my pontificals was in San Nicola in carcere.
4. A papal document or edict. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > papal documents > [noun] > bull
bull1297
brevet1362
bill1450
pontificala1500
bullock1537
legative bull1548
a1500 (c1380) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 480 (MED) Men shulden more trowe hooly werkis þan popis bullis or bischops lettris..alle þes pontificals ben byneþe hooly writ.
5. In the Western Church: a book or manuscript containing the liturgical rites and ceremonies to be performed by a bishop or the Pope.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > book (general) > service book (general) > [noun] > episcopal (containing blessings)
pontifical1584
pontificial1660
benedictionary1780
benedictional1832
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft xv. xxvii. 444 Certaine coniurations taken out of the pontificall and out of the missall.
1615 Bp. J. Hall Imprese of God i, in Recoll. Treat. 659 If euer play-book were more ridiculous, then their Pontificall, and book of holy Ceremonyes.
1646 Bp. J. Taylor Apol. Litvrgie Pref. §16 A very Cento composed out of the Massbook, Pontifical, Breviaries, Manuals, and Portuises of the Roman Church.
1737 R. Challoner Catholick Christian Instructed xv. 154 Solemn Prayers prescribed in the Pontifical.
1753 J. White Protestant Englishman iv. iv. 293 They..who..are able to read, their Rosaries, hours, Breviaries, Missals, and Pontificals.
1845 J. Lingard Hist. & Antiq. Anglo-Saxon Church (ed. 3) I. vii. 323 The pontifical of Archbishop Egbert.
1875 W. G. Henderson Liber Pontificalis C. Bainbridge p. vi The Pontifical proper begins with fol. 114.
1905 C. E. Osborne Life Fr. Dolling xix. 168 The discovery of the Canons of Hippolytus, and of the Pontifical of Bishop Serapion..has drawn attention to the primitive and Catholic character of this rite.
1932 M. V. Harcourt tr. P. de Puniet Rom. Pontifical i. i. 4 The Missal and the Pontifical while developing independently have remained essentially Roman, although certain parts of them betray a foreign origin.
1999 Speculum 74 831 Such a study..requires familiarity..with myriad liturgical manuscripts, especially pontificals.
6. A papal or episcopal court. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > ecclesiastical discipline > court > papal court (Curia) > [noun]
Court of Romec1290
pontifical1629
the Curia1840
Vatican1909
1629 J. Gaule Practique Theories Christs Predict. 241 Though their owne Pontificall might Conuent and Accuse, yet must anothers Tribunall Condemne and Execute.
7. A supporter of the Pope or the papacy; a Roman Catholic. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Christianity > Roman Catholicism > person > [noun]
papist1528
Romanist1534
Roman1537
Romist1543
papistic1545
popestant1549
flesh-maker1551
mass-monger1551
Romish1551
Pope catholicc1554
popeling1563
catholic1570
Romish Catholic1571
popera1577
Pope worshipper1579
papane1581
Roman Catholic1581
Cacolike1582
Cartholic1582
papisha1595
Babylonian1603
papal1611
popinian1613
Papalin1616
Romulist1620
papicolist1633
western1640
papagan1641
universalist1644
red-letter man1677
RC1691
Azymite1728
papalist1752
craw-thumper1786
catholicist1812
papisher1817
pontifical1832
Romanite1839
dogan1847
mickey1851
redneck1852
mackerel-snatcher1855
Latin1867
Romanensian1885
Roman candle1897
Mick1902
Mick Dooley1905
Mickey Doo1905
left-footer1911
Pape1927
right-footer1929
Doolan1940
tyke1941
Tim1958
mackerel-snapper1960
Teague1971
Mickey Doolan1972
1832 Times 11 Feb. 2/4 The Pontificals do not dare show themselves without strong Austrian escorts.
1911 Encycl. Brit. XIX. 183/1 The pope was not satisfied and sent an army into Neapolitan territory. On his return Frederick defeated the pontificals.
1997 Past & Present 155 87 Giovanni Maria Buoninsegni, who was captured by the Pontificals on the shore of Lake Trasimene.
B. adj.
I. Of or relating to a pontiff.
1.
a. Of, relating, or appropriate to a high-ranking cleric, esp. a bishop or prelate; episcopal. pontifical mass n. Roman Catholic Church a solemn high mass celebrated by a bishop in full vestments and insignia.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > [adjective]
spiritual1394
pontificalc1440
prelately?1548
high priestly1582
prelatical1614
Aaronical1620
prelatic1649
papa-prelatical1692
prelatial1721
monsignorial1876
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > bishop > [adjective]
bishoplyc890
mitredc1400
hornedc1425
pontificalc1440
episcopal1485
bishoplike1544
rocheted?1544
rochet1561
pontificial1591
pontifician1618
lawny1647
episcopalian1822
c1440 Sir Degrevant (Thornton) (1949) 1846 (MED) Solemply a cardenalle With a rynge pontyfycalle, He dyd a messe ryalle.
c1450 Alphabet of Tales (1904) I. 74 (MED) A holie hermett þat saw þis Basilius on a tyme walk in his pontificall abbett.
1503 in A. F. Johnston & M. Rogerson Rec. Early Eng. Drama: York (1979) I. 196 Thabbot of saynt Marie abbey the Bishop Sofregayne of york in theyr pontificall adornamentes.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 321/1 Pontyfycall, belongyng to a bysshop, pontifical, episcopal.
1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 iii. ii. 56 Thus did I keepe my person fresh and new, My presence like a roabe pontificall, Nere seene but wondred at. View more context for this quotation
1641 J. Milton Reason Church-govt. 24 The rending of your pontificall sleeves.
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 176/2 The Mitred Abbot..exerciseth Pontifical, or Episcopal Jurisdictions.
1730 E. Wright Some Observ. France, Italy, &c. I. 191 A Pontifical Mass was celebrated by the Pope himself.
1820 J. Milner Suppl. Mem. Eng. Catholics 66 (note) The distinguished Professor of Divinity and Spiritual Director of the Pontifical Seminary of Douay.
1890 Durham & Northumb. Arch. Trans. 4 19 Mr. Bond..has omitted the Pontifical years of the Bishops of Durham altogether.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 378/1 Here on her festival (21st of January) two lambs are specially blessed after pontifical high mass.
1993 Times 20 July 18/6 Solemn Pontifical Concelebrated Mass at 12 noon.
b. spec. Of, belonging to, or relating to the Pope; papal.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > [adjective]
papala1393
pontifical1447
apostolic1477
antichristian1532
popal1537
popisha1540
popely1558
papist1562
popelike1563
popan1580
papane1581
pontific1609
popizing1611
papizing1612
pontificious1624
papal1701
papalist1867
1447 O. Bokenham Lives of Saints (Arun.) (1938) 3318 Þat he wold be so bestyal To forsakyn his glorye pontifical.
1525 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles II. clv. 426 She came to the popes palays in Auignon, and..went to se the pope, who sate in consystory in a chayre pontyficall.
1614 T. Jackson Third Bk. Comm. Apostles Creede iii. xxxi. §1 Thus did Innocent the third, and other Popes, write diuers books,..as if they had proceeded from their Pontificall authority.
1765 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. I. Introd. iii. 82 Besides these pontifical collections, which, during the times of popery, were received as authentic in this island.
1819 Ld. Byron Let. 26 June (1976) VI. 165 I shall add nothing..on account of the Pontifical post-masters—who open letters.
1866 J. Bryce Holy Rom. Empire (new ed.) xiii. 240 Leo III did not suppose..that it was by his sole pontifical authority that the crown was given to the Frank.
1910 Catholic Encycl. VII. 642/2 Simultaneously pontifical approbation was asked for a new edition of the ‘Formula’.
2004 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 2 May a1 Pope John Paul II..had held an open-air Mass during his first pontifical visit to Poland.
c. Adhering to or supporting the Pope, the papacy, or the Roman Catholic Church; popish, papistical. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Christianity > Roman Catholicism > [adjective]
RomanisheOE
Laterana1400
Romana1500
papistical1527
popish1528
antichristian1532
pontifical1533
Babylonical1535
papish1538
Romish1538
papistic1545
west1549
catholic1554
catholic1554
mass-monging1556
western1562
Latin1564
Babylonian1567
Babylonish1570
Romish Catholic?1570
Romanist1572
Roman Catholic1587
papala1593
pseudo-catholical1601
Babylonic1602
pseudo-Catholic1605
Romist1605
Romified1609
Babelish1610
papizing1612
pontifician1612
pontificial1614
Romulean1615
papized1639
Romanistical1646
Romanical1664
papagan1679
popish-like1689
Anglo-Roman1766
papicolar1811
Romanistic1829
pre-Reformation1855
papalistic1861
papalized1879
1533 W. Tyndale Souper of Lorde B vij b Lorde how thys pontificall poet playeth hys parte.
1759 W. Harte Hist. Life Gustavus Adolphus I. 125 His majesty had carried his zeal for popery, by the advice of the pontifical party, to the very precipice of extremity.
1867 Times 21 Oct. 8/4 Many little skirmishes with various results, but in general..in favour of the Pontifical party.
1929 Philos. Rev. 38 489 Though an ardent partisan of the conciliar party against the Papal claims during the Council, he afterward passed over to the ranks of the pontifical party.
2. Stately, dignified; lordly, proud; honourable. Now usually: (depreciative) haughty, arrogant; pompous; dogmatic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pride > ostentation > splendour, magnificence, or pomp > [adjective]
wlonkOE
kine-wurtheOE
reala1325
rialc1330
royalc1400
wlonkfulc1400
statelyc1415
pompousc1425
imperial?1435
pontificalc1440
sumptuous1472
magnific1490
magnificenta1530
statelike1534
pompatic1535
magnificala1538
princely1539
portly1548
regal1561
queen-like?1571
haughty1585
portlike1587
Minerva-like1598
lustrous1605
pompatical1610
pontificial1613
commandinga1616
pompal1616
grand1622
splendid1624
pontifician1629
regifical1656
queenly1791
presidential1804
angeliferous1837
slashing1854
sultanesque1862
pageanted1902
society > authority > rule or government > oppression > [adjective] > domineering or overbearing
masterfulc1390
pontificalc1440
overmasterfula1450
headya1513
imperious1529
supercilious1536
masterlya1544
termagant1546
law-like1556
masterlike1580
dictator-like1582
peremptory1590
domineering1598
burly1605
high-handed1606
pontificial1613
lording1629
overlordingc1629
pontifician1629
peremptor1630
dictatory1639
predominant1642
dictatorial1692
pontific1716
overbearing1718
dictativea1774
knock-me-down1848
imponenta1882
bossy1882
heavy-handed1883
seigneurial1970
c1440 S. Scrope tr. C. de Pisan Epist. of Othea (St. John's Cambr.) (1970) 22 Mercury is a planete that yeueth influence of pontificalle behauynge.
1528 W. Tyndale Obed. Christen Man f. cxxx He is a pontificall fellow, that is, prowd and statly.
1589 ‘M. Marprelate’ Epitome F iij As though he could not be as popelike and pontificall, as my Lorde of Canterburie.
1604 R. Cawdrey Table Alphabet. Pontificall, lordly, sumptuous, bishoplike.
a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) iv. i. 45 Luke. You know Mistris Shave'm? Gettall. The Pontifical Punk?
1672 A. Marvell Rehearsal Transpros'd i. 32 The..leading party of the English Clergy..retained such a Pontifical stiffness towards the foreign Divines.
1750 C. Fleming Devout Laugh 7 He grieves at the utter ruin and desolation of so much pomp and pontifical grandeur.
1888 Times 7 Nov. 9/6 Not in the intolerant and almost pontifical manner assumed by some economists.
1892 19th Cent. Feb. 313 Littré..less provoked..by Comte's arrogance, his pontifical airs, and his hatred of liberty.
1928 A. Ponsonby S. Pepys 4 Irritated by the pontifical instruction of the specialist.
1994 New Republic (Nexis) 18 July 44 In the other essays..he tends to sound callow and even pontifical.
3. In extended use: of, relating to, or denoting a chief priest of any religion; high-priestly.
ΚΠ
a1450 York Plays (1885) 278 (MED) I [sc. Caiaphas] am pontificall prince of all prestis.
1578 T. Nicholas tr. F. Lopez de Gómara Pleasant Hist. Conquest W. India 380 Then came the high priest cloathed in his pontificall vestmentes.
1656 A. Cowley Davideis iv. 150 in Poems It will be therefore askt, Why I make him here perform the office of the High Priest, and dress him in the Pontifical Habits?
1694 Earl of Orrery Herod Great ii. 10 (stage direct.) Annanelus the High-Priest stands drest in all his Pontifical Habits.
1708 S. Ockley Conquest of Syria 121 Omar was invested with the Regal and the Pontifical Dignity, and saluted by universal Consent, The Caliph of the Apostle of God.
1775 J. Adair Hist. Amer. Indians 81 Their pontifical office descends by inheritance to the eldest.
1818 G. S. Faber Horæ Mosaicæ (ed. 2) II. 202 He himself was afterwards transmigratively born again in the body of his pontifical successor Buddas-Addas.
1922 A. Ali Spirit of Islâm viii. 321 They maintain that in addition to..qualities required by the Shiahs proper for the pontifical office, the Imâm should possess bravery.
2001 Jerusalem Post (Nexis) 20 Apr. 9 b Aaron the High Priest is ministering before the nation in all his ‘pontifical’ glory.
4. Roman History. Of or belonging to the pontifices (pontifex n. 1) of ancient Rome.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > priest > kinds of priest > [adjective] > ancient Roman
pontifical1579
Saliarian1598
pontificial1609
pontific1644
Salian1653
1579 T. North tr. Plutarch Liues 73 The great Pontifex..hath the place, authoritie, and dignitie of the highe prieste and master, of their pontificall lawe.
1738 N. Hooke Rom. Hist. I. iii. 57 At the very time when the inferior Pontifices were chosen by the pontifical college.
1772 J. Taylor Summary Rom. Law 34 As several families had hereditary priesthoods in them, the pontifical college might interfere in adoptions to prevent any fraud in that particular.
1865 E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind vi. 124 This practice, Pliny adds, still remains in the pontifical discipline.
1897 A. Drucker tr. R. von Ihering Evol. Aryans iv. v. 360 All the branches of the pontifical duties may be traced back to the original demands laid upon the technical bridgemakers of the migratory period.
1953 Trans. & Proc. Amer. Philol. Assoc. 84 17 The passage from Festus is one of a series of glosses taken almost in a block from Labeo's work on pontifical law.
1995 Amer. Jrnl. Philol. 116 63 Yet partisan zeal and political expediency, not pontifical doctrine or augural law, best account for such statements.
5. Designating a shade of purple associated with pontifical vestments. Cf. pontiff purple n. at pontiff n. Compounds 2. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [adjective] > other purples
mulberry-coloured1787
plum-coloured1799
mulberry1803
amaranthine1808
mauve1833
mauve-colour1859
mauve-coloured1860
mauvish1876
pontifical1880
plummy1885
plum1887
petunia1892
palatinate1893
1880 Times 23 Sept. 10/6 Mr. Richard Dean's ‘Vicar of Laleham’, clad in pontifical purple, earned the prize for the best dish of any coloured round potato.
1899 Daily News 27 Feb. 6/6 A new half-mourning dress..in cloth of a pontifical purple tint.
1913 Classical Rev. 27 19/1 The marble temple..where Virgil publicly took upon himself holy orders, and assumed the Maronian pontifical purple.
II. With reference to the supposed etymology (cf. pontifex n.).
6. Of or relating to bridge-building. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > [adjective] > building bridges
pontifical1667
bridging1891
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost x. 313 Now had they brought the work by wondrous Art Pontifical, a ridge of pendent Rock Over the vext Abyss. View more context for this quotation
1887 J. Ruskin Præterita II. xi. 402 The single-arched bridge..signed for sacred pontifical work by a cross high above the parapet.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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