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单词 religion
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religionn.

Brit. /rᵻˈlɪdʒ(ə)n/, U.S. /rəˈlɪdʒ(ə)n/, /riˈlɪdʒ(ə)n/
Forms: Middle English relegeon, Middle English religeoun, Middle English religioune, Middle English religiune, Middle English relygeoun, Middle English relygioun, Middle English relygyoun, Middle English relygyun, Middle English–1500s relegyon, Middle English–1500s religiun, Middle English–1500s religyone, Middle English–1500s relygion, Middle English–1500s relygione, Middle English–1500s relygyon, Middle English–1600s religeon, Middle English–1600s religione, Middle English–1600s religioun, Middle English–1600s religyon, Middle English–1700s religon, Middle English– religion, late Middle English riligioun, 1500s relegion, 1500s relygyone, 1500s–1600s relligion; Scottish pre-1700 ralegioun, pre-1700 relegioun, pre-1700 relegioune, pre-1700 releidgeon, pre-1700 reliegieoun, pre-1700 religeoun, pre-1700 religeowne, pre-1700 religione, pre-1700 religioun, pre-1700 religioune, pre-1700 religyowne, pre-1700 relligion, pre-1700 relygyon, pre-1700 relygyoun, pre-1700 relygyoune, pre-1700 relygyown, pre-1700 relygyowne, pre-1700 1700s– religion, 1800s– releegion.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French religion; Latin religiōn-, religiō.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman religioun, religiun, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French religion (French religion ) system of beliefs and practices based on belief in, or acknowledgement of, some superhuman power or powers, also any particular such system (both first half of the 12th cent. in Anglo-Norman, originally in commune religion , translating post-classical Latin catholica religio ; the figurative use in sense 4b is apparently not paralleled in French until later (c1810)), monastery (c1130 in Anglo-Norman), religious house (1139 in Anglo-Norman), action or conduct indicating belief in, obedience to, and reverence for a god, gods, or similar superhuman power, piety, devotion (c1145), state of life bound by religious vows (c1150), scrupulousness, conscientiousness (c1210), religious order (end of the 13th cent. or earlier in Anglo-Norman), (specifically) Protestantism (1533 in ceulx de la religion the Protestants, lit. ‘those of the religion’) and its etymon classical Latin religiōn-, religiō supernatural feeling of constraint, usually having the force of a prohibition or impediment, that which is prohibited, taboo, positive obligation, rule, impediment to action proceeding from religious awe or conscience, scruple, manifestation of divine sanction, religious fear, awe, religious feeling, superstition, quality evoking awe or reverence, sanctity, religious observance, religious practice, ritual, particular system of religious observance, cult, conscientiousness, in post-classical Latin also monastic community (8th cent.), religious order, rule observed by a religious order (12th cent.) < re- re- prefix + a second element of uncertain origin; by Cicero connected with relegere to read over again (see relection n.), so that the supposed original sense of ‘religion’ would have been ‘painstaking observance of rites’, but by later authors (especially by early Christian writers) with religāre religate v., ‘religion’ being taken as ‘that which ties believers to God’. Each view finds supporters among modern scholars.Compare Old Occitan religio (late 12th cent., earliest in sense ‘religious order’), Catalan religió (13th cent.), Spanish religión (end of the 12th cent.), Portuguese religião (13th cent.), Italian religione (second half of the 13th cent.). The Latin word was also borrowed into other Germanic languages: compare Middle Dutch, Dutch †religioen state of life bound by religious vows, religie system of faith and worship, belief in superhuman powers, etc., Middle Low German religiōn, religie, German Religion (early 16th cent.), Swedish religion (1539), Danish religion (16th cent.).
1. A state of life bound by religious vows; the condition of belonging to a religious order. Also figurative. Cf. to enter into religion at enter v. Phrases 2.Chiefly in Christian contexts, esp. with reference to the Roman Catholic Church.Recorded earliest in man of religion at Phrases 1.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > [noun] > monastic life or condition
monkhoodeOE
religiona1200
habitc1290
monkheada1400
religiosityc1443
monkery?1536
monachism?1570
monkship1620
cowl1653
monkism1659
monkishnessa1729
the cloister1781
monasticism1795
monkliness1887
a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 49 (MED) Ac þis loc [sc. of perfection] ne haueð non to offren bute þese lif holie men of religiun.
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 43 (MED) Ðo ðe ðese swikele woreld habbeð forlaten and seruið ure drihten on religiun, hie folȝið Daniele, ðe hali profiete.
c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 9 Easkið him..hwer he funde in hali writ religiun openlukest descriueþ & isutelet þen is i sein iames canonial epistel: he seiþ what is Religiun, hwuch is riht ordre.
c1350 (a1333) William of Shoreham Poems (1902) 63 (MED) Relessed Schel hym nauȝt be religioun, Þaȝ he be nauȝt professed.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) viii. 1265 (MED) In blake clothes thei hem clothe, This lady and the dowhter bothe, And yolde hem to religion..After the reule..Where as Diane is seintefied.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 23049 (MED) Þai..Went þaim in to religiun..For to beserue vr lauerd dright.
c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 484 (MED) Oon maner religioun is..a bynding aȝen of a mannys fre wil with certein ordinauncis maad bi God or bi man or with vowis or oothis.
a1500 Lancelot of Laik (1870) 1300 Non orderis had he of Relegioune.
1528 Rede me & be nott Wrothe sig. d viii Ware thou never in religion? Yes so god helpe me and halydom, A dosen yeres continually.
1535 D. Lindsay Satyre 3673 Mariage, be my opinioun, It is better Religioun, As to be freir or Nun.
1586 A. Day Eng. Secretorie i. sig. P3 Forsweare thou nothing good..but building of monasteries and entring into religion.
1663 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures (new ed.) xxviii. 111 Those of the country [sc. China] repute him for a Saint, because he ended his dayes in Religion.
1672 in F. O. Blundell Old Catholic Lancs. (1941) III. v. 47 She is called in Religion by the name of Barbary Ignatius.
1764 H. Walpole Castle of Otranto iv. 139 My father..was retired into religion in the kingdom of Naples.
1825 R. Southey in Q. Rev. 32 364 We must enter into religion and be made nuns by will or by force!
1886 H. N. Oxenham Mem. R. de Lisle 6 The two others..are in religion; the former entered the Order of the Good Shepherd in 1863.
1907 A. B. Teetgen Life & Times Empress Pulcheria xxvi. 220 Eutyches, the superior of a populous monastery outside the walls of Constantinople, had spent practically the whole of his life in religion.
1998 M. P. Magray Transforming Power of Nuns iii. 44 Women did not long remain in religion without a sense of spiritual purpose.
2. Christian Church.
a. A particular religious order or denomination; †a religious house. Also figurative. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > religious order > [noun]
order?c1225
religion?c1225
sectc1380
professiona1393
congregation1493
society1581
religious society1610
community1728
society > faith > artefacts > monastic property (general) > monastery or convent > [noun]
minstereOE
monklifeeOE
clausterc1000
abbotricOE
house?a1160
anchor-house?c1225
religion?c1225
abbeyc1300
nunneryc1300
house (also abbey) of religiona1325
nunryc1325
closterc1330
cloister1340
monasterya1425
monk-house?c1475
friars1479
convent1528
guild1546
prioressy1575
abbey-stead1620
minchery1710
reclusory1821
akhara1838
house of piety1838
kloster1844
society > faith > church government > monasticism > [noun] > monastic rule > order observing particular rule
order?c1225
religion?c1225
sectc1380
professiona1393
congregation1493
communityc1525
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 3 Richten hire & smeðen hire is of vh ordre & of uh religion.
c1300 St. Edward Elder (Laud) 192 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 52 (MED) Seint Edward cam..To an holi man þat þere was neiȝ in an oþur religion.
a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 6352 Somtyme am I Prioresse..And go thurgh all Regiouns Sekyng all religiouns.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 426/1 Saynt Rygoberte..ordeyned a relygyon of chanounes and clerkes.
1496 J. Alcock Mons Perfeccionis (de Worde) sig. bv As hymself for his pryde & enuy was caste oute of the holy relygion of heuen.
1528 T. Cromwell in R. B. Merriman Life & Lett. T. Cromwell (1902) I. 322 The exchaunge to be made bitwene your colledge in Oxforde and his religion for Saundforde.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. cxliij This priest..was receiued into euery Religion with Procession, as though the Legate had been there.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 194 This Religion of Saint Iohns, was greatly preferred, by the fall and suppression of the Templers.
1631 J. Weever Anc. Funerall Monuments 114 If any professed in the said Religion were negligently forgotten.
1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 12 A Dagger, which the King of Spain sent as a Present to the Religion.
1770 Ann. Reg. 1769 147 Some ships of the religion of Malta.
1858 F. W. Faber Foot of Cross i. 67 There were several false and counterfeit religions, which had troubled the Church about that time.
1902 Builder 27 Sept. 265/1 The sudden spread and popularity of the Franciscan religion in North Italy immediately on the death of Francis..was very remarkable.
b. A member of a religious order, spec. a member of the clergy. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1250 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Nero) (1952) 168 Forto beon so angresful..nis nout god icweme, and ancre ful nomilche uor swuch religiun [c1230 Corpus Cambr. religius] nis nout god icweme.
?1316 Short Metrical Chron. (Royal) 527 in J. Ritson Anc. Eng. Metrical Romanceës (1802) II. 292 (MED) Sethe he delede..To thilke that were povre in londe, That other to povre religiouns.
a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) 7556 (MED) Specyaly þat comandeþ he..to bysshopes and persones, To prestys, and ouþer relygyons [v.r. relygyones].
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) 22001 (MED) Quatkin man sum euer it es..Or laued or religiun, Clerk, monk, or canun.
c1426 J. Audelay Poems (1931) 17 (MED) Herbore þe pore pur charyte, And ȝef mete and dreng to þe nede, And cumford hom þat woful be, Ellis be ȝe no relegyon.
c1450 (?a1400) T. Chestre Sir Launfal (1930) 427 (MED) Fyfty rewardede relygyons; Fyfty delyuerede pouere prysouns.
c. Collectively: people devoted to a religious life. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > [noun] > collectively
religious?c1225
conventc1290
collegec1380
religion1487
religioustyc1530
monkery1549
settlement1708
community1728
familia1869
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xx. 162 Till religioune of seir statis, For heill of his saull, gaf he Siluir in-to gret quantite.
a1525 (c1448) R. Holland Bk. Howlat l. 190 in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1925) II. 100 Alkyn chennonis eik of vyer ordouris All maner of religioun ye less & ye maire.
1568 in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1928) II. f. 80 All religioun levis in holines.
3.
a. Action or conduct indicating belief in, obedience to, and reverence for a god, gods, or similar superhuman power; the performance of religious rites or observances. Also in plural: religious rites. Now rare except as merged with sense 5a.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > religion > [noun]
lawa1225
laya1225
religion?c1225
ritec1480
the opium of the people1926
society > faith > worship > observance, ritual > [noun] > instance or form of > plural or collective
orgiac1487
common prayer1493
sacre1542
obsequy?1550
orgy1597
ritual1611
holies1613
Dagonals1614
sacred1624
agenda1637
ephemeris1650
officials1659
religion1667
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 8 Clene religiun..Iseon & helpen widewen..& from þe world witen him clene & vnwemmed.
c1275 Kentish Serm. in J. Hall Select. Early Middle Eng. (1920) I. 217 (MED) Þos faten of watere..ware i clepede baþieres wer þo gius hem wesse for clenesse and for religiun.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Lev. vii. 36 Þei sholden vsen presthod & þe þynges þat þe lord comaundede..þour perpetuel religion [L. religione].
c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) ii. 366 (MED) Sche ladde hir lyf..After þe ritys and þe religioun Of paganysme vsed in þo dawes.
c1475 Advice to Lovers in J. O. Halliwell Select. Minor Poems J. Lydgate (1840) 41 A man of sadde religioun.
1553 R. Eden tr. S. Münster Treat. Newe India sig. Gijv They eate that fleshe with great religion.
1577 T. Vautrollier tr. M. Luther Comm. Epist. to Galathians (new ed.) f. 151 They that trust in theyr owne righteousnes, thinke to pacifie the wrath of God by their..voluntarie religion.
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage iii. i. 191 They vsed yet some religion in gathering of their Cinamon,..sacrificing before they began [etc.].
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost i. 372 The Image of a Brute, adorn'd With gay Religions full of Pomp and Gold. View more context for this quotation
1726 G. Leoni tr. L. B. Alberti Architecture II. 21/2 The Ancients used to found the Walls of their Cities with the greatest religion, dedicating them to some God who was to be their guardian.
1788 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall V. xlix. 89 The public religion of the Catholics was uniformly simple and spiritual.
1900 R. W. Dixon Hist. Church Eng. (1902) VI. xxxvi. 5 The religions of the religious orders..were swept away under the condemnation of superstition and abuse.
1913 M. C. Burbridge Twentieth Cent. Musings i. 42 Love may not increase with much religion, but it will increase many-fold with wisdom.
b. A religious duty or obligation. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > duty or obligation > [noun] > a duty or moral necessity > a religious duty
religion1537
society > faith > aspects of faith > piety > [noun] > duty or obligation
religion1537
1537 in State Papers Henry VIII (1830) I. ii. 557 Thei thoght a religion to kepe secret, betwene God and them, certayn thinges.
1549 H. Latimer 2nd Serm. before Kynges Maiestie 5th Serm. sig. Oviiiv The dutye betwene man and wife, which is a holy religyon, but not religiously kepte.
1659 H. L'Estrange Alliance Divine Offices i. 14 Christs Gospel is not a ceremonial law..but it is a religion to serve God, not in bondage of the figure or shadow, but in the freedom of the spirit.
4.
a. A particular system of faith and worship.class, mystery, natural religion, etc.: see first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > religion > a religion or church > [noun]
churcheOE
kirkc1175
spousea1200
lawa1225
lorea1225
religionc1325
faithc1384
sectc1386
seta1387
leara1400
hirselc1480
professiona1513
congregation1526
communion1553
schism1555
segregation1563
sex1583
hortus conclususa1631
confessiona1641
dispensation1643
sectary1651
churchship1675
cult1679
persuasion1732
denomination1746–7
connection1753
covenant1818
sectarism1821
organized religion1843
society > faith > church government > monasticism > [noun] > monastic rule > order observing particular rule > member of particular order
religionc1325
possessioner1395
regular1443
possessionarya1533
eremite1587
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 2812 (MED) Þanne þe religion & holi chirche worþ ef sone ybroȝt al adoun.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 192 It is worthi to trowe sawes & writynges of poetes and of writers ȝif here religioun and feþ is nouȝt aȝens gode þewes and maners.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 18944 (MED) In þat siquar was in þat tun Men of alkin religioun, Of al maner of nacioun.
c1450 (?c1400) tr. Honorius Augustodunensis Elucidarium (1909) 32 (MED) Leef maister, which is þe beste religioun?
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. xcijv They neyther allure nor compelle any man vnto their Religion.
1593 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie iv. xi. 189 The Church of Rome, they say,..did almost out of all religions take whatsoeuer had any faire & gorgeous shew.
1631 B. Jonson Staple of Newes ii. iv. 55 in Wks. II I wonder what religion hee's of.
1662 E. Stillingfleet Origines Sacræ ii. vi. §15 Whereby we plainly see what clear evidence is given to the truth of that religion which is attested with a power of miracles.
1732 G. Berkeley Alciphron I. iv. xxv. 263 The Christian Religion, which pretends to teach Men the Knowledge and Worship of God.
1791 T. Paine Rights of Man i. 75 If they are to judge of each others religion, there is no such thing as a religion that is right.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. vi. 65 All religions were the same to him.
1862 F. M. Müller in Edinb. Rev. Apr. 381 All important religions have sprung up in the East.
1918 A. W. Fortune Conception of Authority in Pauline Writings ii. 67 Christianity was not intended to be a Jewish religion.
1925 San Antonio (Texas) Light 11 July 1/1 More primitive religions..represent their gods as liars, cheats and destroyers of earth women.
1968 A. Storr Human Aggression (1976) vi. 81 The history, both of religions and political ideologies, clearly shows that beliefs are bound to become modified in the course of time.
1991 A. Hourani Hist. Arab Peoples ii. v. 96 In northern Iraq there were Yazidis, followers of a religion which had elements derived from both Christianity and Islam.
b. figurative. A pursuit, interest, or movement, followed with great devotion.
ΚΠ
1576 G. Whetstone Ortchard of Repentance 100 in Rocke of Regard The religion of wanton louers like the papistes.
1593 M. Drayton Idea ii. sig. C2 Then Orphane thoughts with sorrow be you waind, When loues Religion shalbe thus prophayn'd.
1666 C. Molloy Hollands Ingratitude sig. E3v No way is indirect for wealth to a Dutch-man, whether of fraud or violence; gain is his Religion.
1702 T. Brown Select Epist. Cicero 351 Money is a Whore's Religion, Love is down-right Superstition.
1849 H. W. Longfellow Kavanagh xvi. 78 The memory of that mother had become almost a religion to her.
1872 H. P. Liddon Some Elements Relig. i. 23 We hear men speak of a religion of art, of a religion of work, of a religion of civilization.
1929 T. Wolfe Look Homeward, Angel v. 52 Not merely to possess property, but to draw income from it was part of the religion of her family.
1961 Western Polit. Q. 14 408 Marxian Socialism has become a religion of history.
2003 Jrnl. (Newcastle) (Nexis) 22 May 56 There is no place to hide in a city where football is a religion and United's players are instantly recognisable.
c. With the and capital initial. Chiefly in French contexts: Protestantism. Obsolete (historical in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Christianity > Protestantism > [noun]
gospel1552
Protestancy1565
religion1577
Protestantism1606
reformity1606
1577 tr. ‘F. de L'Isle’ Legendarie sig. Gviij There was a noise raised that the Admiral had endeuoured to expel the Masse, and to plant the Religion in France.
1603 R. Johnson tr. G. Botero Hist. Descr. Worlde 99 They againe are deuided into thirteene Cantons, eight whereof are catholike, the residue of the religion.
1642 J. Howell Instr. Forreine Travell ix. 116 They of the Religion, are now Town-lesse, and Arme-lesse.
1656 in J. A. Clyde Hope's Major Practicks (1938) II. 162 That no persone excomunicat for not conformeing themselfes to the religion shall enjoy..their lands, rents, and revenues.
1704 Clarendon's Hist. Rebellion III. xv. 508 Those of the Religion possessed themselves with many arm'd Men of the Town-House.
1848 Hist. Protestantism in France (Relig. Tract Soc.) iii. 56 The singular name by which Protestantism in France was distinguished was that of ‘The Religion’; an emphatic appellation.
1883 Catholic Presbyterian Aug. 121 They became not merely pastors, but statesmen—head of the Religion, as Protestantism was called.
5.
a. Belief in or acknowledgement of some superhuman power or powers (esp. a god or gods) which is typically manifested in obedience, reverence, and worship; such a belief as part of a system defining a code of living, esp. as a means of achieving spiritual or material improvement.organized religion: see the first element.
ΚΠ
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) v. l. 2757 Lik as he wolde haue luyed ther in pes..Withynne the temple of myhti Hercules Vnder a shadwe of religioun.
1533 tr. Erasmus Enchiridion Militis Christiani Ep. Ded. sig. b.viiv He dothe not strayte condempne their maner of lyuyng whiche dothe shewe & admonysshe them in what thynges most true religyon doth stande or rest.
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. xlvjv Amonges the Suyces encreased dayly contention for Religion.
1597 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie v. lxv. 165 The tribe of Ruben..were..accused of backwardnes in religion.
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage i. iv. 16 True Religion is the right way of reconciling and reuniting man to God.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan i. xii. 52 There are no signes..of Religion, but in Man onely.
1704 R. Nelson Compan. Festivals & Fasts ii. ix. 475 It keeps a lively Sense of Religion upon our Minds.
1776 A. Smith Inq. Wealth of Nations II. v. ii. 474 So very slender a security as the probity and religion of the inferior officers of revenue. View more context for this quotation
1832 H. Martineau Hill & Valley iii. 45 The best part of religion is to imitate the benevolence of God to man.
1877 W. Sparrow Serm. vii. 90 True religion, in its essence and in kind, is the same everywhere.
1905 Westm. Gaz. 14 Apr. 2/2 Religion is the great divider of mankind.
1960 C. Day Lewis Buried Day iii. 49 Religion..formed a natural part of my life.
1963 R. N. Frye Heritage of Persia v. 190 Religion dominated the lives of the ancients far more than of contemporary man.
2004 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 27 May 14/1 He wasn't calling for the overthrow of religion by rock and roll.
b. Chiefly poetic and literary. Religion personified.
ΚΠ
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) i. v. 112 Ancyant faith and valiant knychthed, With chaste religioune, sal than the lawys led.
1609 W. Shakespeare Louers Complaint in Sonnets sig. Lv Religious loue put out religions eye.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Timon of Athens (1623) iii. ii. 77 Religion grones at it. View more context for this quotation
1662 J. Milton To Sir H. Vane in G. Sykes Life & Death Sir H. Vane 94 Therefore on thy firm hand Religion leanes In peace, and reckons thee her eldest Son.
1717 A. Pope Eloisa to Abelard in Wks. 419 There stern religion quench'd th' unwilling flame.
1781 W. Cowper Expostulation 492 Religion, if in heavenly truths attired, Needs only to be seen to be admired.
1844 A. B. Welby Poems (1867) 72 'Tis then that sweet Religion's holy wing Broods o'er the spirit.
1851 Freethinker's Mag. 1 Jan. 225 Religion..is a many-headed monster that there is no killing.
1908 F. W. Bourdillon Preludes & Romances 43 Throned Religion quails, Sick in her heart lest haply in the end Her good God cannot His own name defend.
1931 ‘H. MacDiarmid’ First Hymn Lenin 28 This is the kirk o' my faithers And I..am stricken aghast For here, ready for the road, Religion was biddin' goodbye.
c. Awe, dread. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > fear > awe > [noun]
awec1175
horror1579
religiona1642
the mind > mental capacity > expectation > feeling of wonder, astonishment > awe, reverential wonder > [noun]
stupora1398
fearc1400
awfulness1574
horror1579
religiona1642
awe1743
a1642 W. Bedell in T. Fuller Abel Redevivus (1651) 65 He took a generall view of most parts of Itale as far as Cumæ, where (not without some Religion and horror)..he beheld the Cave of Sibilla.
6. The religious sanction or obligation of an oath or similar bond. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > duty or obligation > moral or legal constraint > [noun]
artingc1400
oblige1475
obligationc1485
astrictionc1540
religion1578
obligence1610
engagement1636
responsibility1780
1578 T. Rogers tr. P. Cæsar Gen. Disc. Damnable Sect Vsurers ix. f. 28 These common rules should bee well remembred of all men..lest beyng deceaued through the religion of an oth..; they compell their subiectes to the obseruing of vnlawfull othes.
1593 R. Cosin Apol. for Sundrie Proc. (rev. ed.) ii. ix. 85 A witnesse is vrged by the religion of an oath, and is not entended to thrust himselfe into the matter willingly.
1619 E. Herbert Let. 16 May in Coll. Hist. & Archæol. Montgomeryshire (1886) XX. cxlix. 215 Being under ye religion of a promise to yo'r Sacred Ma'tie yt I would be in france before ye Sunday followinge.
1647 J. Howell New Vol. of Lett. 236 According to the rules and religion of friendship.
a1694 J. Tillotson Serm. (1742) II. xxii. 65 If the religion of an oath will not oblige men to speak truth, nothing will.
1704 J. Blair in W. S. Perry Hist. Coll. Amer. Colonial Church: Virginia (1870) I. 107 I shall under the same religion of an oath acquaint your Lordships with..what I remember.
1788 V. Knox Winter Evenings II. v. vi. 146 An apprehension has been expressed by good and wise men that the religion of an oath is, in the present age, less and less regarded.
1880 G. S. Godkin tr. V. Emanuele II in Life Victor Emmanuel II (new ed.) vi. 74 I signed a peace with Austria... The honour of the country and the religion of my oath demanded that it should be faithfully followed out.
7. figurative. Strict fidelity or faithfulness; conscientiousness; devotion to some principle. Also: an instance of this. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > agreement > observance > [noun]
i-kepyngec1230
heed1357
keepingc1380
observancea1393
observation?a1425
contemplation1440
observing1458
conscience1483
conservation1544
heedfulness1561
heediness1596
religion1597
observancy1609
punctualness1620
punctuality1622
heeding1678
adherence1715
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet i. ii. 90 When the deuout religion of mine eye Maintaines such falshood, then turne teares to fire. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) iv. i. 187 Ros... Keep your promise. Orl. With no lesse religion, then if thou wert indeed my Rosalind. View more context for this quotation
1631 B. Jonson New Inne i. vi. 156 Out of a religion to my charge, And debt profess'd, I ha'made a selfe-decree.
1640 W. Habington Hist. Edward IV 182 The ancient league observ'd with so much Religion betweene England and the Low Countries.
1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses I. Pref. An old Word is retain'd by an Antiquary with as much Religion as a Relick.

Phrases

P1. man (woman, etc.) of religion: a person bound by religious vows, as a monk or nun; a member of the clergy. Now historical. [Probably after Anglo-Norman home de religiun, Anglo-Norman and Old French home de religion (c1227; Middle French, French homme de religion), and Anglo-Norman gent de religiun, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French gent de religion (1275 or earlier in Anglo-Norman; French gent de religion), although attested slightly earlier. With woman of religion compare Middle French dame de religion nun (1364 or earlier), and also Anglo-Norman dame de religiun abbess, prioress (1328 or earlier).]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > monk > [noun]
monkeOE
brotherOE
claustermanc1175
man (woman, etc.) of religiona1200
cloister-monkc1325
friarc1330
son1416
religion manc1475
pater1481
abbey man1483
scapularc1540
monach?c1550
cloister-man1581
monastic1632
cowlist1637
religieux?a1649
religioso1708
saint1888
a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 49 (MED) Ac þis loc [sc. of perfection] ne haueð non to offren bute þese lif holie men of religiun.
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 5735 (MED) King edgar & seint aþelwold..An oþer hous..hii rerde of seinte marie, Of womman of religyon & made a nonnerye.
c1350 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Harl. 874) (1961) 8 (MED) By his heued ben bitokned gode prelates of holy chirche. By þe heer þe Men of Religioun [Fr. la gent de religiun] þat shullen ben white þorouȝ holynesse.
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) 7 (MED) Renkez of relygioun þat reden and syngen And aprochen to hys presens and prestez arn called..Þay hondel þer [sc. at the altar] his aune body and usen hit boþe.
Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 360 Nune, womann of relygione, monialis, monacha.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 3192 (MED) The cheff vyker..Haue set..Somme folkys of relygyon Hys offys to excersyce.
a1578 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) I. 310 This bischope and the lordis of reliegieoun..gaif sentance against this innocent man.
1670 J. Evelyn tr. Moral Pract. Jesuites 296 The Iesuites..might practise on him the Doctrine of their Father Amy, who allows a man of Religion to kill him who publishes things scandalous of his Order.
a1707 W. Petyt Jus Parliamentarium (1739) i. 57 Others which had Offices perpetual, should be as perpetual as People of Religion.
1809 Amer. Law Jrnl. Jan. 57 The whole of this statute is in force, except those parts which relate to Prelates, men of Religion, and writs of attaint.
1878 ‘Ouida’ Friendship III. xxxi. 46 As women of religion, with the red cross on their breasts, bend over the wide war-wounds of naked men, so she beheld corruption.
1911 G. Hodges Saints & Heroes 239 The principal business of a man of religion,—a priest, a monk, or a friar,—was to say prayers.
1996 L. M. Bitel Land of Women viii. 168 Their stories of lustfully wayward women of religion.
P2. house (also †abbey) of religion: a religious house, esp. a monastery or nunnery; (in later use also) a place of worship, as a church, mosque, or synagogue. [After Anglo-Norman maisun de religiun, Old French, Middle French maison de religion (1265).]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > monastic property (general) > monastery or convent > [noun]
minstereOE
monklifeeOE
clausterc1000
abbotricOE
house?a1160
anchor-house?c1225
religion?c1225
abbeyc1300
nunneryc1300
house (also abbey) of religiona1325
nunryc1325
closterc1330
cloister1340
monasterya1425
monk-house?c1475
friars1479
convent1528
guild1546
prioressy1575
abbey-stead1620
minchery1710
reclusory1821
akhara1838
house of piety1838
kloster1844
a1325 St. Thomas Becket (Corpus Cambr.) l. 561 in C. D'Evelyn & A. J. Mill S. Eng. Legendary (1956) 628 (MED) He grantede ek þat a churche of þe kynges fe..ne ssolde iȝiue be As to hous of religion wiþoute þe kynges leue.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 41 (MED) Sacrilege is..huanne me bernþ oþer brekþ cherches..oþer hous of relygioun.
c1425 (?a1400) Arthur (Longleat 55) 488 (MED) He buryed Bedewere Hys frend..And so he dude other Echon In Abbeys of Relygyon.
?1449 Petition in Rotuli Parl. (1767–77) V. 157/2 Temporaltees of Bisshuprichez, Abbathiez, Prioriez, and of all othir Housez of Religion.
c1536 in J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. (1611) ix. xxi. 773/1 Spoiled in like maner..as the housys of Religion hath bene.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 144 Many houses of relygion within the Citie..were searched for goodes of aliauntes.
1603 G. Downame Treat. conc. Antichrist ii. 27 Vpon them there doe yet remaine, besides some of the Popes palaces and courts, diuers churches and houses of religion and other buildings of note.
1679 Bp. J. Gordon Reformed Bishop ii. 27 Monasteries..might have been still Houses of Religion, without having any dependance upon Rome.
1733 Capt. Downes All Vows Kept iii. ii. 33 I am retir'd into a House of Religion; not vowed, but for Probation.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe (1820) III. vi. 139 Albert had received within a house of religion the Jewish captive, and..the paramour of a brother of the Order.
1861 R. C. Jenkins Last Crusader vii. 373 He dismissed accordingly all the brothers that were there,..and formed the house anew into a house of religion.
1910 Eng. Hist. Rev. 25 607 The committee..expects important results from the excavation of early monastic localities... The sites of these ancient houses of religion should be carefully examined.
1993 Toronto Star (Nexis) 31 Dec. a16 Our governments, schools, hospitals and houses of religion are virtually bankrupt.
2008 D. Wilson Out of Storm i. ii. 37 To the nineteen houses of religion already in existence was added the Convent of St Mary Magdalene.
P3. to make (a) religion of, to make (it) (a) religion to.
a. To make a point of; to be scrupulously careful to.In later use with indefinite article in forms to make a religion of and to make it a religion to.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > care, carefulness, or attention > take care about [verb (transitive)] > be scrupulously careful about
to stand upon ——1549
to make (a) religion of1561
to stand on ——a1593
1561 Bible (Geneva) Gen. xxxix. 4 (note) Because God prospered him: and so he made religion to serue his profite.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) v. ii. 195 By your command (Which my loue makes Religion to obey) I tell you this. View more context for this quotation
1742 R. North & M. North Life F. North 167 The factious Party made it Religion to propagate the Faith of the Plot..as far as they could carry it by their Correspondences.
1869 W. M. Baker New Timothy 199 Its acidity sharpens Mr. Wall's teeth.., yet, under the circumstances, he makes a religion of eating it.
1916 ‘W. D. Bank’ Average Woman xiv. 177 He had resumed his visits to the club, but did not make it a religion to go there every night.
1980 S. Fish Is there Text in this Class? ix. 219 Had he not made a religion of keeping to his word, then his breaking of it could not have been cited by Aufidius as a capital crime.
b. To make a point of not; to be scrupulously careful not to. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1601 B. Jonson Fountaine of Selfe-love v. v. sig. L3v Let Mortalls learne To make Religion of offending Heauen. View more context for this quotation
1617 J. Hales Serm. Oxf. 29 The ancients seeme to haue made a religion to meddle with it [sc. the book of Revelation], and thought it much better to admire it with silence, then to adventure to expound it.
1622 H. Peacham Compl. Gentleman vi. 44 Nor bee so foolish precise as a number are, who make it Religion to speake otherwise then this or that Author.
P4. Originally U.S. to get religion: to be converted; (in extended use) to take matters seriously, to give proper attention to an issue.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > preaching > conversion > convert [verb (intransitive)]
turnc1225
converta1400
to come through1708
to get religion1772
to see the light1812
to experience religion1837
vert1888
to find religion (also Christ, God, Jesus, etc.)1957
1772 A. Hunter Let. 18 Mar. in P. V. Fithian Jrnl. & Lett. (1900) 22 We have had a considerable stir of religion in college since you went away, Lewis Willson is thought to have got religion.
1802 Methodist New Connexion Mag. Nov. 432 A number, too, are wrought upon in the usual way, and hopefully get religion without any of these extraordinary appearances.
1857 C. W. Elliott New Eng. Hist. I. 460 Capt. Underhill killed his neighbor's wife, and ‘got his religion on a pipe of tobacco’.
1908 ‘E. C. Hall’ Aunt Jane of Kentucky (1909) i. 24 We went home feelin' like we'd been through a big protracted meetin' and got religion over again.
1952 Manch. Guardian Weekly 9 Oct. 7 It is sad news for his publishers that he has got religion.
1993 N.Y. Times 26 Mar. a 28/1 The White House spokesman said the formal plan may not be ready for another few weeks, so it's still possible his boss may get religion.
2001 Time 22 Oct. 73/1 The Bush Administration..has suddenly got religion about tracking down terrorists' assets..and an array of other tools on law enforcement's wish list.
P5.
religion of nature n. (a) = natural religion n.; (b) a religion involving the worship of natural objects and phenomena in place of a more formal system of religious belief.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > religion > kinds of religions > [noun] > natural
natural religion1622
religion of nature1622
naturalisma1641
neologism1827
nature-religion1853
pre-animism1910
society > faith > sect > non-Christian religions > other non-Christian sects > nature > [noun]
natural religion1622
religion of nature1622
1622 G. Goodman Creatures praysing God 32 If you consider the Creatures, betweene God and God, in stead of a naturall discourse, here you haue a religion of nature.
1730 M. Tindal (title) Christianity as old as Creation, a republication of the Religion of Nature.
1827 F. A. Walter tr. B. G. Niebuhr Rom. Hist. I. xxii. 265 The early religion of the Latins was a religion of nature [Ger. Naturdienst].
1895 J. Kidd Morality & Relig. v. 191 Vedism..was a religion of nature. The objects of its worship..were the powers of nature.
1902 W. James Varieties Relig. Experience iv. 91 In that ‘theory of evolution’ which..has within the past twenty-five years swept so rapidly over Europe and America, we see the ground laid for a new sort of religion of Nature, which has entirely displaced Christianity from the thought of a large part of our generation.
1954 R. N. Stromberg Relig. Liberalism 18th-Cent. Eng. iii. 31 Committed to a religion of nature, they [sc. deists] suspected that the whole Christian revelation was no more than a tissue of lies and fables.
1961 D. G. James Matthew Arnold i. 22 The essay itself is given up chiefly to a warm exposition of her religion of nature.
1997 N. Walter Humanism 49 Ernst Haeckel, the German advocate of Darwinism (and inventor of Ecology in 1866), advocated a religion of nature called Monism.
P6. religion of the book: a religion entailing adherence to a book of divine revelation; spec. Judaism, Christianity, or Islam. Cf. People of the Book n. at people n. Phrases 1b.
ΚΠ
1830 Q. Rev. Oct. 560 Mahommedanism has been received by negro nations with more confidence, because it is the religion of the Book,—a written, and, as they believe, an attested religion, of the truth of which the koran is the record and the proof.
1888 B. Manly Bible Doctr. of Inspiration, explained & Vindicated i. i. 13 Christianity is the Religion of the Book.
1941 Amer. Jrnl. Semitic Lang. & Lit. 58 23 Mohammed considers himself not the founder of a new religion but rather a protagonist of the age-old religion of the Book.
1991 R. Oliver Afr. Experience (1993) vii. 85 When Islam eventually became a religion of the book, other ‘people of the book’, Christians and Jews, were specifically excluded from the operations of the holy war.
1992 M. E. Marty & R. S. Appleby Glory & Power i. 21 It is relatively easy to locate the fundamentalist groundings in the three faiths called the Religions of the Book.
P7. religion of humanity: the humanistic religion founded by Auguste Comte; see positivism n. 2. [After French réligion de l'Humanité (1844 or earlier in Comte).]
ΚΠ
1852 Westm. Rev. New Ser. 1 347 Comte presents himself as the founder of the religion of humanity, as the systematic upholder of the supremacy of moral life.
1925 G. K. Chesterton Everlasting Man i. iv. 89 The Religion of Humanity was a term commonly applied to Comtism, the theory of certain rationalists who worshipped corporate mankind as a Supreme Being.
2000 P. A. Mellor in A. Hastings et al. Oxf. Compan. Christian Thought 678/2 Comte..sought to develop his own ‘religion of humanity’ complete with sociologist-priests, altars, a calendar of feast days, and modes of worship.
P8. religion is the opium of the people and variants: see opium n. 2b.

Compounds

C1. General attributive, objective and instrumental.
religion-arousing adj. rare
ΚΠ
1927 J. S. Huxley Relig. without Revelation viii. 314 Potential religion-arousing objects.
religion class n.
ΚΠ
1891 Deseret Weekly (Salt Lake City, Utah Territory) 28 Feb. 290/3 Apostle Lund was pleased to learn that the religion classes had commenced.
1972 Times 5 Jan. 10/5 Religion classes conducted by students and ex-students of the college were not religious at all.
2003 N. al-Radi Baghdad Diaries (new ed.) 93 Apparently Hammoodi is taking religion classes.
religion-dresser n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
a1634 J. Day Peregrinatio Scholastica (Sloane 3150) f. 30 This new vicker was made out of an olde ffrier, that had bene twice turnd at a Religion-dressers.
religion game n.
ΚΠ
1961 J. B. Wilson Reason & Morals ii. 120 Thus J. R. Lucas..even puts in a good word for the religion-game.
2004 M. Lyon Game between Gods xv. 159 Jesus gave a warning to not play into the religion game.
religion infectious adj. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
a1700 A. Shields Church-communion Enquired Into (1706) 36 Such as are..Religion Infectious, like to spread, and leaven all in Communion with such a Congregation.
religion-making n.
ΚΠ
1697 J. Partridge Defectio Geniturarum i. xii. 103 He was but an obscure fellow before he fell upon this Crafty Design of Religion-making.
1762 O. Goldsmith Citizen of World II. 183 They are arrived at such refinement in religion-making, that they have actually formed a new sect without a new opinion.
1888 Mrs. H. Ward Robert Elsmere III. vii. xlix. 360 We are in the full stream of religion-making.
2001 S. Clarke in A. Sharma Relig. in Secular City xvii. 183 The acceptance of being merely a counter force in culture-weaving and religion-making appears to acquiesce to the secondary role of Dalit culture.
religion-masked adj. rare
ΚΠ
1633 J. Ford 'Tis Pitty shee's Whore v. sig. I2 Your relligion-masked sorceries.
2004 Washington Times (Nexis) 16 Feb. a19 Religion-masked extremism feeds on poverty, deprivation and ignorance.
religion-mender n. now rare
ΚΠ
1647 Mercurius Clericus No. 1. sig. A4v A further account concerning the affaires of our Syon, and the..Religion-makers, Menders, or Marers there.
1737 E. Smith App. Cure of Deism 19 These are some of the Nostrums of our great Religion-Mender.
1822 J. Hook Pen Owen I. i. 16 I never knew any good come of your state-menders or religion-menders. They all make more holes than they stop.
1824 W. E. Andrews Crit. & Hist. Rev. Fox's Bk. Martyrs I. 380 The irreligious and blasphemous pretentions of those religion-menders.
religion-monger n.
ΚΠ
1625 J. Stradling Divine Poemes iii. 122 That religion-monger Mohomet.
1718 Entertainer 253 The Fathers [are represented as]..a Parcel of old passive Religion-Mongers.
1878 G. J. Romanes Candid Exam. Theism 136 Religion-mongers as a class are apt to show too little regard for the sentiments, as distinguished from the beliefs, of those to whom they offer their wares.
1908 Times 11 Nov. 14/3 Is..Dionysus a god, or a religion-monger from the East..with a knack of mesmerism?
1998 Hindu (Nexis) 12 Nov. Though most people profess to be religious, they fear religion-mongers. So few vote for religious parties.
religion-raptured adj. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1797 R. Southey tr. P. de Azevedo Tojal Charles Redeemed in Lett. from Spain 341 The fervid soul of that blest Maid, Religion-raptur'd.
religion school n.
ΚΠ
1892 Deseret Weekly (Salt Lake City, Utah Territory) 6 Aug. 216/3 She had occupied the position of president of the Young Ladies' Association, secretary of the Sabbath school and class teacher in the religion school.
1897 Jewish Q. Rev. 9 663 The Religion-school is not the place for such explanations.
1961 V. G. Simmons Path of Life xviii. 119 A flourishing religion school is the guarantee of Jewish consciousness.
1999 Jewish Chron. 30 July 12/5 David Schwarzmann, who has retired after 31 years as headmaster of Edgware Reform Synagogue's religion school, had been given a special kiddush and presentation.
religion teacher n.
ΚΠ
1878 Polybiblion (Société Bibliographique) 392 The proper attitude of religion teachers towards scientific experts.
1942 Jrnl. Bible & Relig. 10 132/2 The note of inspiration is carried further in the religion teacher's task of counselling.
2009 Irish Times (Nexis) 28 Feb. 5 He was fired from his job as a religion teacher at a Catholic girls high school in Queens.
C2.
religion complex n. (a) Psychology a complex (complex n. 3) relating to religion; (b) a complex of buildings serving a religious function.
ΚΠ
1922 Brit. Jrnl. Psychol. Oct. 117 Such complexes clearly exist in the normal mind with perfectly free access to consciousness, e.g. the ‘religion complex’.
1934 M. H. Weseen Dict. Amer. Slang 58 Jesus stiff, a tramp with a religion complex.
1989 Arkansas Democrat-Gaz. (Nexis) 13 Aug. His religion complex in Northwest Arkansas included the Christ of the Ozarks statue.
2005 Houston (Texas) Chron. (Nexis) 17 Feb. (This Week section) 1 The 241-acre facility has its own pharmacy, dentists, barbershop, religion complex, recreational facility and doctors.
religion man n. [compare earlier man (woman, etc.) of religion] Obsolete a member of a religious order; a member of the clergy.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > monk > [noun]
monkeOE
brotherOE
claustermanc1175
man (woman, etc.) of religiona1200
cloister-monkc1325
friarc1330
son1416
religion manc1475
pater1481
abbey man1483
scapularc1540
monach?c1550
cloister-man1581
monastic1632
cowlist1637
religieux?a1649
religioso1708
saint1888
c1475 (a1449) J. Lydgate Minor Poems (1934) ii. 793 Religioun men alway wonnyng in the court..It may wele ryme, but it accordith nought.
a1538 A. Abell Roit or Quheill of Tyme f. 30 v, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Religion Be prechin of dewote religioun men.
religion shop n. humorous or depreciative a church.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > sanctuary or holy place > church or place of worship > [noun]
churcheOE
God's houseOE
kirkc1175
temple1399
steeple1555
church building1605
steeple-house1644
shrine1645
Dominical1659
religion shop1811
1811 L.-M. Hawkins Countess & Gertrude II. xxvii. 79 Well may scoffers talk of the ‘religion-shops’ of London.
1911 C. Marsland Angel of Gila i. 16 See the nat'ral cur'osity as is to start a religion shop, an' grind us fellers inter angels.
2007 Star (S. Afr.) (Nexis) 20 Dec. 13 The church boasts branches in about 40 countries—including its first 24-hour one-stop religion shop in Japan.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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