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单词 oracle
释义

oracle


oracle

one who is wise, authoritative, or highly regarded; a divine revelation
Not to be confused with:auricle – outer portion of the ear; a part resembling an ear

or·a·cle

O0104400 (ôr′ə-kəl, ŏr′-)n.1. a. A shrine consecrated to the worship and consultation of a prophetic deity, as that of Apollo at Delphi.b. A person, such as a priestess, through whom a deity is held to respond when consulted.c. The response given through such a medium, often in the form of an enigmatic statement or allegory.2. a. A person considered to be a source of wise counsel or prophetic opinions.b. An authoritative or wise statement or prediction.3. A command or revelation from God.4. In the Bible, the sanctuary of the Temple.
[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin ōrāculum, from ōrāre, to speak.]

oracle

(ˈɒrəkəl) n1. (Other Non-Christian Religions) a prophecy, often obscure or allegorical, revealed through the medium of a priest or priestess at the shrine of a god2. (Other Non-Christian Religions) a shrine at which an oracular god is consulted3. (Other Non-Christian Religions) an agency through which a prophecy is transmitted4. any person or thing believed to indicate future action with infallible authority5. a statement believed to be infallible and authoritative6. (Bible) Bible a. a message from Godb. the holy of holies in the Israelite temple[C14: via Old French from Latin ōrāculum, from ōrāre to request]

or•a•cle

(ˈɔr ə kəl, ˈɒr-)

n. 1. (esp. in the ancient world) a. a shrine at which inquiries are made of a particular deity through a means of divination. b. the agency by which the inquiry is answered, as a priest or priestess. c. the typically terse, ambiguous response of the deity. 2. a person who delivers authoritative and usu. influential pronouncements. 3. any utterance regarded as authoritative, unquestionably wise, or infallible. 4. the holy of holies of the Temple built by Solomon in Jerusalem. I Kings 6:16, 19–23. [1350–1400; Middle English < Old French < Latin ōrāculum divine utterance <ōrā(re) to supplicate, pray to]
Thesaurus
Noun1.oracle - an authoritative person who divines the futureoracle - an authoritative person who divines the futureprophesier, prophet, vaticinator, seeraugur, auspex - (ancient Rome) a religious official who interpreted omens to guide public policydiviner - someone who claims to discover hidden knowledge with the aid of supernatural powersprophetess - a woman prophetsibyl - (ancient Rome) a woman who was regarded as an oracle or prophet
2.oracle - a prophecy (usually obscure or allegorical) revealed by a priest or priestess; believed to be infallibledivination, prophecy - a prediction uttered under divine inspiration
3.oracle - a shrine where an oracular god is consultedshrine - a place of worship hallowed by association with some sacred thing or person

oracle

noun1. prophet, diviner, sage, seer, clairvoyant, augur, soothsayer, sibyl, prophesier Ancient peoples consulted the oracle and the shaman for advice.2. prophecy, vision, revelation, forecast, prediction, divination, prognostication, augury, divine utterance Aeneas had begged the Sybil to speak her oracle in words.3. authority, judge, expert, source, professional, master, specialist, adviser, scholar, guru, mentor, pundit, wizard, mastermind, connoisseur, arbiter, high priest, horse's mouth, fundi (S. African) He is the oracle on modern etiquette.

oracle

nounSomething that is foretold by or as if by supernatural means:divination, prophecy, soothsaying, vaticination, vision.
Translations
圣贤大智者神谕处神谕宣示台

oracle

(ˈorəkl) noun1. a very knowledgeable person. I don't know the answer to this problem, so I'd better go and ask the oracle. 大智者,聖賢 大智者,圣贤 2. in former times, a holy place where a god was believed to give answers to questions. the oracle at Delphi. 神諭宣示台,神諭處 神谕宣示台,神谕处

IdiomsSeework the oracle

Oracle


oracle,

in Greek religion, priest or priestess who imparted the response of a god to a human questioner. The word is also used to refer to the response itself and to the shrine of a god. Every oracular shrine had a fixed method of divination. Many observed signs, such as the motion of objects dropped into a spring, the movement of birds, or the rustle of leaves. Often dreams were interpreted. A later and popular method involved the use of entranced persons whose ecstatic cries were interpreted by trained attendants. Before an oracle was questioned consultants underwent rites of purification and sacrifice. There were many established oracles in ancient Greece, the most famous being those of Zeus at DodonaDodona
, in Greek religion, the oldest oracle, in inland Epirus, near modern Janina, sacred to Zeus and Dione. According to Herodotus, an old oak tree there became an oracle when a black dove, from Egyptian Thebes, settled on it.
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 and of Apollo at DelphiDelphi
, locality in Phocis, Greece, near the foot of the south slope of Mt. Parnassós, c.6 mi (10 km) northeast of the port of Cirrha. It was the seat of the Delphic oracle, the most famous and most powerful of ancient Greece.
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 and at Didyma in Asia Minor. Other oracular shrines were located in Syria, Egypt, and Italy.

Oracle

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

In ancient Greece, the populous consulted with oracles, which are those able to contact the gods and answer questions put to the deities. Although the priesthood led public worship and offered necessary sacrifices, the oracles made the personal contact and expressed the will of the gods. These oracles would go into trances and frequently speak in a greatly changed voice, with no later recollection of what they had said.

The words uttered by the oracle were frequently confusing to the questioner, often ambiguous or even nonsensical. The priests interpreted what was said and thereby brought order out of possible chaos. This was especially the case when the questioner was an ambassador or diplomatic figure and where the question held political significance.

Delphi was the Greek center for oracles. It was only open for nine months out of the year. When open, the oracle could only be approached on one day a month. The order of questioners was determined by lot, although it was possible for those with influence to gain precedence.

Greece was not the only place for oracles. Many primitive societies had similar soothsayers. James Wellard, writing in Man, Myth and Magic, suggests that all practitioners of divination are, in effect, oracles, and that African tribes, Australian aborigines, medieval necromancers, astrologers, and modern psychiatrists are all variations on the same theme.

Oracle

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

An Oracle is a shrine to a deity, at which questions may be asked. It is also the term for the answers to those questions. Sometimes the “channel” giving those answers is also referred to as the oracle. The word comes from the Latin oraculum, meaning “to speak.” Oracles were numerous in antiquity. Among the most celebrated were the Oracle of Delphi, the Oracle of Dodona, of Amphiaraus in Bæotia, and of Trophonius at Lebadea. In Italy, the best known oracle was that of Fortuna at Præneste.

Various methods of presenting the oracles—the answers to questions—were employed, differing from one site to another. The most common method was “incubation.” This required the enquirer to sleep in the sacred area until he or she received an answer in a dream. Also common was direct voice from the priestess, who acted much like a medium. Here, however, she was acting as an intermediate between human and deity, rather than between human and spirit of the deceased. Sometimes oracles were received by the petitioner clairvoyantly or clairaudiently.

The expression “to work the oracle” meant to influence the message given; to bring pressure to bear to obtain an utterance in your favor.

Sources:

Buckland, Raymond: The Fortune–Telling Book: The Encyclopedia of Divination and Soothsaying. Detroit: Visible Ink Press, 2004Encyclopedia Britannica. Chicago: William Benton, 1964Parke, H. W.: Sibyls and Sibylline Prophecy in Classical Antiquity. New York: Routledge, 1988Potter, D.: Sibyls in the Greek and Roman World. Rhode Island: Journal of Roman Archæology 3, 1990Rose, H.J.: Religion in Greece and Rome. New York: Harper & Row, 1959

Oracle

 

in ancient Greece, Rome, and the Orient, a prediction that supposedly came from a divinity and was communicated by priests to inquiring believers; the site where such predictions were given was also called an oracle. The most famous oracles were those of Ammon at Thebes (Egypt), Zeus at Dodona (Epirus), Apollo at Delphi (Greece), and Faunus and Fortuna at Praeneste (Italy).

In modern literary language, the term “oracle” is also used to describe the prophesying divinity himself or the priest who gives the answers or prophecies that supposedly come from the divinity. In a figurative sense an oracle is a person whose judgments are acknowledged as absolute truth, as revelation.

oracle

1. a prophecy, often obscure or allegorical, revealed through the medium of a priest or priestess at the shrine of a god 2. a shrine at which an oracular god is consulted 3. an agency through which a prophecy is transmitted 4. Biblea. a message from God b. the holy of holies in the Israelite temple

Oracle

Oracle Corporation

Oracle

(Oracle Corporation, Redwood Shores, CA, www.oracle.com) The world's largest database and enterprise software vendor founded in 1977 by Larry Ellison. The Oracle Database has been Oracle's flagship product, which was the first DBMS to incorporate the SQL query language. It became very popular due to its robustness and huge variety of platforms that it ran on.

In the mid-1990s, Oracle was a major promoter of the network computer, forming subsidiary Network Computer, Inc. to define the specifications for the platform. Although the network computer did not take off, the principles it embodied are widely used in today's thin client architectures and are ever increasing. See network computer and Liberate.

After the turn of the century, the company greatly enhanced its application offerings by acquiring world class software companies such as PeopleSoft in 2004 and Siebel Systems in 2005. In 2010, Oracle acquired Sun Microsystems to become a full-fledged computer systems company as well as master of Java, one of the Internet's most widely used software platforms. See Oracle Database, Oracle Fusion, Sun, Java, PeopleSoft and Siebel software.
MedicalSeesunLegalSeeLiberateFinancialSeeJava

ORACLE


AcronymDefinition
ORACLEOperational Analog Computing and Logistic Equipment
ORACLEOak Ridge Automatic Computer and Logic Engine
ORACLEOne Rich American Called Larry Ellison
ORACLEOak Ridge Automatic Computer Logical Engine
ORACLEOperational Research and Critical Link Evaluation
ORACLEOrganization of Regulatory Administrators of Continuing Legal Education
ORACLEOptimum Reliability And Component Life Estimator
ORACLEOptical Reception of Announcements by Coded Line Electronics
ORACLEOrdnance Rapid Area Clearance System
ORACLEOverview of the Role of Antibiotics in Curtailing Labor and Early Delivery (clinical trials)

See ORA

oracle


Related to oracle: Oracle Database
  • noun

Synonyms for oracle

noun prophet

Synonyms

  • prophet
  • diviner
  • sage
  • seer
  • clairvoyant
  • augur
  • soothsayer
  • sibyl
  • prophesier

noun prophecy

Synonyms

  • prophecy
  • vision
  • revelation
  • forecast
  • prediction
  • divination
  • prognostication
  • augury
  • divine utterance

noun authority

Synonyms

  • authority
  • judge
  • expert
  • source
  • professional
  • master
  • specialist
  • adviser
  • scholar
  • guru
  • mentor
  • pundit
  • wizard
  • mastermind
  • connoisseur
  • arbiter
  • high priest
  • horse's mouth
  • fundi

Synonyms for oracle

noun something that is foretold by or as if by supernatural means

Synonyms

  • divination
  • prophecy
  • soothsaying
  • vaticination
  • vision

Synonyms for oracle

noun an authoritative person who divines the future

Synonyms

  • prophesier
  • prophet
  • vaticinator
  • seer

Related Words

  • augur
  • auspex
  • diviner
  • prophetess
  • sibyl

noun a prophecy (usually obscure or allegorical) revealed by a priest or priestess

Related Words

  • divination
  • prophecy

noun a shrine where an oracular god is consulted

Related Words

  • shrine
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