单词 | preach |
释义 | preach From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Religionpreachpreach /priːtʃ/ ●○○ verb1 [intransitive, transitive]RRTALK TO somebody to talk about a religious subject in a public place, especially in a church during a servicepreach to Christ began preaching to large crowds.preach on/aboutpreached a sermon about the prodigal son. The vicar preaching the gospel. He traveled the southern states, 2 [transitive]PERSUADE to talk about how good or important something is and try to persuade other people about this Alexander has been preaching patience.preach the virtues/merits/benefits of something a politician preaching the virtues of a free market 3 [intransitive]ADVISE to give someone advice, especially about their behaviour, in a way that they think is boring or annoyingpreach about grown-ups preaching about the evils of drugs4 → preach to the converted/choir → practise what you preach→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpuspreach• After completing his studies, in which he excelled in philosophy and theology, he was ordained and was assigned to preaching.• Campaigns that have merely preached abstinence have always failed.• He also preached at Blackfriars on Sundays and a mid-week lecture in Milk Street.• You're always preaching honesty, and then you lie to me.• Mom, stop preaching - I'm old enough to take care of myself.• In those days there was little opportunity to hear Gospel preaching in Shropshire.• How couldst thou preach of heaven and hell in such a careless, sleepy manner?• Renaissance humanism preached respect for the greatness of the human being as an individual: it stressed personal intelligence and ability.• Gordon was preaching the morality of scholarship.preaching the gospel• It was only a few minutes into Sunday when Vice President Gore started preaching the gospel.• He would tour the world quietly preaching the gospel of surfing.preach the virtues/merits/benefits of something• He may preach the virtues of an empty bank account, but Damon is fairly obsessed with filling his own.• By preaching the merits of downsizing, they have provided bosses with arguments for measures that tough economic times have required anyway.Origin preach (1200-1300) Old French prechier, from Late Latin praedicare, from Latin dicare “to say publicly” |
随便看 |
|
英语词典包含170365条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。