释义 |
di·o·nys·i·an \in sense 1 |dīə|nisēən, in sense 2 -nizhən or -nishən or -nīsēən\ adjective Etymology: in sense 1, from Dionysius (personal name) + English -an; in sense 2, from Latin Dionysia + English -an 1. usually capitalized a. [Dionysius the Elder died 367 B.C. Greek tyrant and his son Dionysius the Younger fl 345 B.C. Greek tyrant] : of or relating to the elder or the younger Dionysius < Dionysian cruelty > b. [Dionysius Exiguus, 6th century Roman monk and scholar born in Scythia who introduced the method of reckoning the Christian era from the supposed date of the birth of Christ] : of or relating to Dionysius Exiguus < the dionysian period of 532 years after which the moon's changes recur on the same days of the week and month > c. [Dionysius the Areopagite fl A.D. 500 Greek author of The Celestial Hierarchy and other Neoplatonic Christian works that greatly influenced medieval thought] : of or relating to Dionysius the Areopagite 2. a. usually capitalized : devoted to the worship of the god Dionysus or connected with the Dionysia : dionysiac 1 < the Eleusinian, the Dionysian, and the Orphic rites were the most important mystery religions of Greece — G.E.Mylonas > < the most radical departure from the rationalistic interpretation of life and history is to be found in the Dionysian religious tradition — Reinhold Niebuhr > b. usually capitalized [translation of German dionysisch] : of a character symbolized by the god Dionysus or the cult of his myth and worship: (1) : of a sensuous, frenzied, orgiastic, or Bacchic character : unbounded, lawless, or irrational in nature — contrasted with Apollonian < Nietzsche had used the terms Dionysian and Apollonian to separate the creative-passionate from the critical-rational — J.M.Barzun > < the Dionysian experience, our ecstatic participation in the divine life — Sheldon Cheney > (2) : pregnant with strength : creatively striving : passionate : faustian < the unleashed fury of Dionysian dynamics — C.H.Cardinal > |