| 释义 | 
		Definition of Umbanda in English: Umbandanoun ʊmˈbandəo͝omˈbändə mass nounA Brazilian folk religion combining elements of macumba, Roman Catholicism, and the practices of indigenous peoples of South America. as modifier Umbanda rites  Example sentencesExamples -  This was accomplished by identifying the religion primarily with Umbanda.
 -  Because of this accusation, for ten days Umbanda beliefs and practices were judged harshly in the media.
 -  Created with practitioners of Cuban Santeria, Haitian Vodou, and Brazilian Umbanda, it shows ritual and social practices as they existed in New York City in 1999.
 -  Likewise, Uruguayan devotees have taken the Brazilian par excellence Umbanda to Venezuela and Argentine practitioners are taking it to Spain and Italy.
 -  For approximately twenty years after arriving from Brazil in the mid 1960s Umbanda was not socially perceived as a religious movement in Buenos Aires.
 -  Temples practice both Umbanda, a syncretic variant with strong Spiritist and Catholic influences, and Batuque.
 
    Definition of Umbanda in US English: Umbandanouno͝omˈbändə A Brazilian folk religion combining elements of macumba, Roman Catholicism, and the practices of indigenous peoples of South America. as modifier Umbanda rites  Example sentencesExamples -  Because of this accusation, for ten days Umbanda beliefs and practices were judged harshly in the media.
 -  Likewise, Uruguayan devotees have taken the Brazilian par excellence Umbanda to Venezuela and Argentine practitioners are taking it to Spain and Italy.
 -  Created with practitioners of Cuban Santeria, Haitian Vodou, and Brazilian Umbanda, it shows ritual and social practices as they existed in New York City in 1999.
 -  For approximately twenty years after arriving from Brazil in the mid 1960s Umbanda was not socially perceived as a religious movement in Buenos Aires.
 -  This was accomplished by identifying the religion primarily with Umbanda.
 -  Temples practice both Umbanda, a syncretic variant with strong Spiritist and Catholic influences, and Batuque.
 
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