| 释义 |  secular /sekˈū-lər/  adjectivenounRelating to, or coming or observed once in, a lifetime, generation, century or age (in ancient Rome about 100 to 120 years)Relating to the present world, or to things not spiritualCivil, not ecclesiasticalLay, not concerned with religion(of clergy) not bound by monastic rules, opp to regularOf the secular clergyLasting for a long timeAgelongAge-oldAppreciable only in the course of ages or over an extended periodOccurring in cycles
 A lay personA member of the clergy, such as a parish priest, not bound by monastic rules
 ORIGIN: L saeculāris, from saeculum a lifetime, generation secˈularism  noun The belief that the state, morals, education, etc, should be independent of religionGJ Holyoake's (1817–1907) system of social ethics
 secˈularist  noun and  adjective secularistˈic  adjective secularity /-larˈ/   noun secūlarīzāˈtion or secūlarīsāˈtion  noun secˈularize or secˈularise  transitive verb  To make secular secˈularly  adverb secular arm  noun  The civil power, authority or courts secular games  plural noun (Roman hist) Games held at long intervals secular hymn  noun  A hymn for the secular games |