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单词 Anglican
释义

Definition of Anglican in English:

Anglican

adjective ˈaŋɡlɪk(ə)nˈæŋɡləkən
  • Relating to or denoting the Church of England or any Church in communion with it.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • St Giles is a very large and affluent Anglican church, justifying a Canon and a Reverend and boasting a large congregation.
    • He incurred the wrath of the Catholic and Anglican churches and needlessly upset a lot of people.
    • As leader of the Anglican Communion, the archbishop faced growing demands on his time from Anglican churches abroad.
    • There are currently no plans to make redundant any Anglican church in the Archdeaconry of Wilts.
    • Well the Anglican church of Australia is of course in full communion with the Church of England.
    • She taught Sunday school at both St. George's and St. Luke's Anglican Churches.
    • But Methodist rules forbid the use of fermented grape juice while Anglican church law requires the use of fermented wine.
    • Women are now routinely ordained in many Anglican churches and serve as bishops as well in some.
    • Senior clergy at the Minster have organised the service in an outward display of unity between the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches.
    • It is no longer a question of whether communion among the Anglican churches will be broken.
    • Another children's service was held on Christmas Eve at St George's Anglican Church.
    • In the UK, we've had a constitutionally enshrined Anglican church for several hundred years now.
    • However, such preaching was not well received by most Anglican clergy, and churches began to be barred to him.
    • To me these Anglican Benedictines truly lived out the ideal of service encouraged by their Rule.
    • He was not sure whether the Bulgarian Orthodox Church ever recognised Anglican orders.
    • They were married at Trinity Church, South Australia's first Anglican Church.
    • There were speakers from the Catholic, Presbyterian, Baptist and Anglican churches.
    • Over recent years attendance figures at Anglican churches nationally have gradually been declining.
    • She was a lifelong member of the Church of England and her father and two brothers were Anglican ministers.
    • Churchgoers have welcomed a new team rector to Anglican churches in Bacup and Stacksteads.
noun ˈaŋɡlɪk(ə)nˈæŋɡləkən
  • A member of any of the Anglican Churches.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Or is there some uniquely superior way in which this is thought to be more true for Anglicans than for other churches?
    • Nowadays, for younger Anglicans and Roman Catholics, this history may feel rather alien and very remote.
    • Most Protestants, certainly Anglicans, would be quite at ease with these words, and so they should be since they mirror their theology.
    • Some evangelical Anglicans saw and see it as a betrayal of the Reformation.
    • As Anglicans we believe that the Body of Christ is genuinely catholic, that is, genuinely universal.
    • For many Anglicans, the admission of children to communion seemed to turn the whole world on its head.
    • For Anglicans, the Diocese of Salisbury holds a special significance with regard to our liturgical origins.
    • Second, what is the role of the episcopacy in our vocation as Anglicans for the larger Church?
    • The author expresses the hope that Western Anglicans can begin to learn from their non-Western neighbors.
    • The difference between Puritans and Anglicans is nicely illustrated in sermons from the period.
    • Yet Anglicans must consider how important it is to require Christians to receive laying on of hands by a bishop.
    • Baptists did not arrive as missionaries as had Anglicans, Methodists, and Roman Catholics.
    • The U.S. agreement reflects good relationships between Lutherans and Anglicans in many countries.
    • Whether within or separate from the Anglicans, such Christian sects are gaining increasing political significance.
    • As with Orthodox Christians, Anglicans have no central or overriding authority as do Roman Catholics.
    • This is why it has been so difficult for Anglicans to experiment with new ways of worship, church life and thinking.
    • His views are backed by conservative and evangelical Anglicans worldwide.
    • The archbishop of York last night dismissed reports which suggested more Muslims were going to mosques than Anglicans to Church.
    • Methodists and Anglicans may currently receive communion in each other's churches.
    • It is a worthwhile exercise to wrestle with that which we Anglicans hold in common apart from our shared history in the Church of England.

Origin

Early 17th century: from medieval Latin Anglicanus (its adoption suggested by Anglicana ecclesia 'the English church' in the Magna Carta), from Latin Anglicus, from Angli (see Angle).

 
 

Definition of Anglican in US English:

Anglican

adjectiveˈaNGɡləkənˈæŋɡləkən
  • Relating to or denoting the Church of England or any Church in communion with it.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is no longer a question of whether communion among the Anglican churches will be broken.
    • Women are now routinely ordained in many Anglican churches and serve as bishops as well in some.
    • Another children's service was held on Christmas Eve at St George's Anglican Church.
    • Churchgoers have welcomed a new team rector to Anglican churches in Bacup and Stacksteads.
    • However, such preaching was not well received by most Anglican clergy, and churches began to be barred to him.
    • Over recent years attendance figures at Anglican churches nationally have gradually been declining.
    • To me these Anglican Benedictines truly lived out the ideal of service encouraged by their Rule.
    • They were married at Trinity Church, South Australia's first Anglican Church.
    • He was not sure whether the Bulgarian Orthodox Church ever recognised Anglican orders.
    • As leader of the Anglican Communion, the archbishop faced growing demands on his time from Anglican churches abroad.
    • She taught Sunday school at both St. George's and St. Luke's Anglican Churches.
    • Well the Anglican church of Australia is of course in full communion with the Church of England.
    • In the UK, we've had a constitutionally enshrined Anglican church for several hundred years now.
    • St Giles is a very large and affluent Anglican church, justifying a Canon and a Reverend and boasting a large congregation.
    • He incurred the wrath of the Catholic and Anglican churches and needlessly upset a lot of people.
    • She was a lifelong member of the Church of England and her father and two brothers were Anglican ministers.
    • But Methodist rules forbid the use of fermented grape juice while Anglican church law requires the use of fermented wine.
    • There were speakers from the Catholic, Presbyterian, Baptist and Anglican churches.
    • There are currently no plans to make redundant any Anglican church in the Archdeaconry of Wilts.
    • Senior clergy at the Minster have organised the service in an outward display of unity between the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches.
nounˈaNGɡləkənˈæŋɡləkən
  • A member of any of the Anglican Churches.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The author expresses the hope that Western Anglicans can begin to learn from their non-Western neighbors.
    • The archbishop of York last night dismissed reports which suggested more Muslims were going to mosques than Anglicans to Church.
    • Some evangelical Anglicans saw and see it as a betrayal of the Reformation.
    • Or is there some uniquely superior way in which this is thought to be more true for Anglicans than for other churches?
    • The difference between Puritans and Anglicans is nicely illustrated in sermons from the period.
    • As Anglicans we believe that the Body of Christ is genuinely catholic, that is, genuinely universal.
    • For Anglicans, the Diocese of Salisbury holds a special significance with regard to our liturgical origins.
    • Whether within or separate from the Anglicans, such Christian sects are gaining increasing political significance.
    • Baptists did not arrive as missionaries as had Anglicans, Methodists, and Roman Catholics.
    • Most Protestants, certainly Anglicans, would be quite at ease with these words, and so they should be since they mirror their theology.
    • Yet Anglicans must consider how important it is to require Christians to receive laying on of hands by a bishop.
    • His views are backed by conservative and evangelical Anglicans worldwide.
    • Nowadays, for younger Anglicans and Roman Catholics, this history may feel rather alien and very remote.
    • Methodists and Anglicans may currently receive communion in each other's churches.
    • This is why it has been so difficult for Anglicans to experiment with new ways of worship, church life and thinking.
    • It is a worthwhile exercise to wrestle with that which we Anglicans hold in common apart from our shared history in the Church of England.
    • As with Orthodox Christians, Anglicans have no central or overriding authority as do Roman Catholics.
    • Second, what is the role of the episcopacy in our vocation as Anglicans for the larger Church?
    • For many Anglicans, the admission of children to communion seemed to turn the whole world on its head.
    • The U.S. agreement reflects good relationships between Lutherans and Anglicans in many countries.

Origin

Early 17th century: from medieval Latin Anglicanus (its adoption suggested by Anglicana ecclesia ‘the English church’ in the Magna Carta), from Latin Anglicus, from Angli (see Angle).

 
 
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