| 释义 | 
		Definition of res publica in English: res publicanoun reɪz ˈpʊblɪkəˈpʌblɪkəˈpəblikə The state, republic, or commonwealth.  Example sentencesExamples -  The inner forum, our self-awareness in foro interno, disturbs the outer forum of the republic, the res publica.
 -  Too often these days we reduce philosophy to confession and intimacy to kitsch precisely because we live without a sense of the democratic res publica.
 -  It represented the separation of the private household and its economy from the sphere of collective public institutions - the polis or res publica.
 -  The res publica, as the popes called it, was intended to represent a restored Roman state with authority in much of Italy under secular papal rule.
 -  A typical novus homo (first of his family to reach the senate and/or consulship), like Cato the Elder before him and Cicero after him, Marius wanted to beat the nobles at their own game and win acceptance as a leader of their res publica.
 -  The condition of openness implied by the term res publica facilitates opportunities for an awareness of contingencies bearing on human interest evoking satisfaction, indifference, of dissatisfaction.
 -  The public was the res publica or nation as a whole rather than an aspect of it, and the nation was embodied or ‘represented’ in the divinely anointed or providentially empowered figure of the king.
 -  They are seen, like firemen and policemen, as guardians of the public good, of the res publica, those things of the public that we all care about.
 -  I wish you the very best of luck in addressing and dismantling this mind-boggling distortion of the democratic and social values of a res publica.
 -  It diminishes the republic - the res publica, or public things that define our commonweal.
 -  It was in no sense a kind of political power, but those charged with the conduct of the res publica, or public business did not lightly ignore it.
 -  The original Latin term res publica means ‘public thing.’
 -  In The City of God, St Augustine revised Cicero's famous definition of a res publica to read: ‘a multitude of rational beings united by agreeing to share the things they love.’
 -  The term republic comes from Latin word res publica meaning ‘public affairs.’
 -  The word is derived from the Latin res publica, or ‘public affair’, and suggests an ownership and control of the state by the population at large.
 -  They have helped to re-awaken a notion of the res publica: a decent realm which we can all share with dignity.
 -  Only a tiny minority had a real political role in the res publica as a whole.
 -  The story is, in effect, a theater review, with the viewers of the speech assumed to be an audience that wants to be entertained and impressed rather than a public - the citizens of a res publica - needing to be convinced.
 -  Third, the justification for taxation resides in an obligation to contribute to the funding of the res publica.
 
 
 Origin   Latin, literally 'public matter'.    Definition of res publica in US English: res publicanounˈpəblikə The state, republic, or commonwealth.  Example sentencesExamples -  I wish you the very best of luck in addressing and dismantling this mind-boggling distortion of the democratic and social values of a res publica.
 -  Third, the justification for taxation resides in an obligation to contribute to the funding of the res publica.
 -  The term republic comes from Latin word res publica meaning ‘public affairs.’
 -  A typical novus homo (first of his family to reach the senate and/or consulship), like Cato the Elder before him and Cicero after him, Marius wanted to beat the nobles at their own game and win acceptance as a leader of their res publica.
 -  The res publica, as the popes called it, was intended to represent a restored Roman state with authority in much of Italy under secular papal rule.
 -  Too often these days we reduce philosophy to confession and intimacy to kitsch precisely because we live without a sense of the democratic res publica.
 -  The word is derived from the Latin res publica, or ‘public affair’, and suggests an ownership and control of the state by the population at large.
 -  They are seen, like firemen and policemen, as guardians of the public good, of the res publica, those things of the public that we all care about.
 -  The public was the res publica or nation as a whole rather than an aspect of it, and the nation was embodied or ‘represented’ in the divinely anointed or providentially empowered figure of the king.
 -  In The City of God, St Augustine revised Cicero's famous definition of a res publica to read: ‘a multitude of rational beings united by agreeing to share the things they love.’
 -  It represented the separation of the private household and its economy from the sphere of collective public institutions - the polis or res publica.
 -  Only a tiny minority had a real political role in the res publica as a whole.
 -  The inner forum, our self-awareness in foro interno, disturbs the outer forum of the republic, the res publica.
 -  They have helped to re-awaken a notion of the res publica: a decent realm which we can all share with dignity.
 -  The original Latin term res publica means ‘public thing.’
 -  The condition of openness implied by the term res publica facilitates opportunities for an awareness of contingencies bearing on human interest evoking satisfaction, indifference, of dissatisfaction.
 -  It was in no sense a kind of political power, but those charged with the conduct of the res publica, or public business did not lightly ignore it.
 -  It diminishes the republic - the res publica, or public things that define our commonweal.
 -  The story is, in effect, a theater review, with the viewers of the speech assumed to be an audience that wants to be entertained and impressed rather than a public - the citizens of a res publica - needing to be convinced.
 
 
 Origin   Latin, literally ‘public matter’.     |