释义 |
vic·ar \ˈvikə(r)\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English vicar, vicair, viker, from Late Latin vicarius, from Latin, substitute, deputy, from vicarius, adjective, substituting, delegated, vicarious — more at vicarious 1. : a human representative or agent of God on earth < those who regard the pope as being God's vicar > 2. a. : the incumbent of an impropriated or formerly appropriated benefice of the Church of England : the priest of a parish of which the tithes are owned by a layman or formerly a spiritual corporation : an incumbent of a Church of England parish not a rector b. : a Protestant Episcopal clergyman in charge of a dependent chapel as the deputy of another clergyman c. : an ecclesiastic who acts as the substitute or representative of another in the Roman Catholic Church 3. a. : an administrative deputy : vicegerent b. : someone or something that serves as a substitute < there is no vicar for poetry on earth — R.P.Blackmur > |