释义 |
Romanist /ˈrəʊmənɪst /noun1An expert in or student of Roman antiquities or law, or of the Romance languages.A mixture of doctoral students setting out the direction of their research and established Romanists trying out new ideas present 12 essays. 2chiefly derogatory A member or supporter of the Roman Catholic Church: the guide of the Romanist is the dictum of the Pope...- Certainly, the burnings of Mary Tudor's reign had made the Romanists and Protestants more entrenched in their views.
- The Romanists became even more bold, demanding to know why I believed that the Bible was the Word of God; demanding to know why I believed Sola Scriptura; even asking if I would be offended if they offered me a set of rosary beads.
- The Anglican thinks to himself, ‘I'm not a Romanist bound by all that legalism, so I'm set.’
adjective chiefly derogatoryBelonging or adhering to the Roman Catholic Church: most English Catholics were more royalist than Romanist...- I don't buy that this about Evangelicals suspicious of the Anglo-Catholic Romanist leanings.
- Although Parliament alone could change this order, Mary's Romanist supporters began to celebrate mass as soon as she arrived in the capital.
- All liturgics I can celebrate in Romanist basilicas.
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