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单词 deconsecrate
释义

Definition of deconsecrate in English:

deconsecrate

verb diːˈkɒnsɪkreɪtdiˈkɑnsəˌkreɪt
[with object]
  • Transfer (a building) from sacred to secular use.

    把(建筑)改作俗用

    the church was deconsecrated in the early nineteenth century

    教堂在19世纪早期被改作俗用。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • As St Crumnathy's Cathedral is currently deconsecrated, it is not possible to install Canon Doris into her stall at the moment.
    • The Museum of Contemporary Religious Art resides in a deconsecrated modernist-style chapel of a former Jesuit study center.
    • In countries outside India, temples have often been fashioned from converted premises, from schools, deconsecrated churches, homes, even factories.
    • St. Mary's Abbey, or Friary, has not been deconsecrated.
    • The altar was deconsecrated in 1964, and the rest of the church in 1967.
    • Curator Jan Hoet set the ninth edition of the Sonsbeek public art exhibition in the original park, a deconsecrated church and a shopping mall.
    • Sitting in his office beneath the choir loft of a deconsecrated church in Cincinnati, James Verdin can't hear the World Peace Bell toll from across the Ohio River.
    • A DEVELOPER'S £750,000 gamble to transform a deconsecrated and empty church in York's city centre into a classy restaurant or café bar could start to pay off next week.
    • An additional venue, the deconsecrated church known as the Athenaeum, which is directly alongside St Mark's Cathedral, has also been obtained for the exhibition and will house one of the artist's installations.
    • Publican John Keating is redeveloping the deconsecrated St Mary's Church on Mary Street in Dublin 1, which is due to open as a bar and restaurant at the end of the summer.
    • Nothing remains of the old Holy Trinity burial ground, which dates back to the 1840s - it was deconsecrated in the 1970s - apart from the old wall and three gravestones.
    • ‘At the moment they can just be deconsecrated at the behest of a bishop and the people who paid for these churches have no say,’ Mr Cassidy said.
    • It is even more difficult if the conversion involves buying or building on part of a graveyard, where church authorities must deconsecrate the ground.
    • I was a fan of this musical when it played in a deconsecrated church basement in the West End in 2002.
    • In 1880, at a time when enthusiasm for industrial invention was at its height, the museum was reorganized and the deconsecrated church nave converted into a magnificent space for exhibiting machines.
    • Last October, Andres Serrano's photographs were exhibited in the deconsecrated church of Santa Marta.
    • Performances take place in a deconsecrated church in the grounds.
    • The chapel, built in the 1870s, was deconsecrated at the start of the second world war and used as an electronics factory before being converted into two houses in the 1980s
    • ‘It is a disgrace to see the Church where Wolfe Tone was baptised and where the famous preacher John Wesley gave sermons being deconsecrated and turned into a pub,’ Mr Cassidy said.
    • After the English Reformation, many holy buildings such as tombs, charnel-houses, cloisters and churches were deconsecrated, emptied of their contents, sold away or destroyed.

Derivatives

  • deconsecration

  • nounˌdiːkɒnsɪˈkreɪʃ(ə)nˌdikɑnsəˈkreɪʃ(ə)n
    • The property is situated in what was once St Kevin's Church which was built on the site in 1883 and served the local community until its deconsecration in 1983.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The church, St Kevin's in Portobello, Dublin 8, was built in 1883 and was in use until its deconsecration in 1983.
      • Contemporary Christian writings confirm this sense of degradation by noting that removal of a statue from its sanctuary resulted in automatic deconsecration.
      • Branch chairman John Wilkinson handed over the standard for deconsecration and hymns were played by the Wilton Royal British Legion Band

Definition of deconsecrate in US English:

deconsecrate

verbdēˈkänsəˌkrātdiˈkɑnsəˌkreɪt
[with object]usually be deconsecrated
  • Transfer (a building) from sacred to secular use.

    把(建筑)改作俗用

    the church was deconsecrated in the early nineteenth century

    教堂在19世纪早期被改作俗用。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘At the moment they can just be deconsecrated at the behest of a bishop and the people who paid for these churches have no say,’ Mr Cassidy said.
    • St. Mary's Abbey, or Friary, has not been deconsecrated.
    • It is even more difficult if the conversion involves buying or building on part of a graveyard, where church authorities must deconsecrate the ground.
    • Sitting in his office beneath the choir loft of a deconsecrated church in Cincinnati, James Verdin can't hear the World Peace Bell toll from across the Ohio River.
    • A DEVELOPER'S £750,000 gamble to transform a deconsecrated and empty church in York's city centre into a classy restaurant or café bar could start to pay off next week.
    • The chapel, built in the 1870s, was deconsecrated at the start of the second world war and used as an electronics factory before being converted into two houses in the 1980s
    • Performances take place in a deconsecrated church in the grounds.
    • As St Crumnathy's Cathedral is currently deconsecrated, it is not possible to install Canon Doris into her stall at the moment.
    • Nothing remains of the old Holy Trinity burial ground, which dates back to the 1840s - it was deconsecrated in the 1970s - apart from the old wall and three gravestones.
    • Last October, Andres Serrano's photographs were exhibited in the deconsecrated church of Santa Marta.
    • An additional venue, the deconsecrated church known as the Athenaeum, which is directly alongside St Mark's Cathedral, has also been obtained for the exhibition and will house one of the artist's installations.
    • After the English Reformation, many holy buildings such as tombs, charnel-houses, cloisters and churches were deconsecrated, emptied of their contents, sold away or destroyed.
    • The Museum of Contemporary Religious Art resides in a deconsecrated modernist-style chapel of a former Jesuit study center.
    • Publican John Keating is redeveloping the deconsecrated St Mary's Church on Mary Street in Dublin 1, which is due to open as a bar and restaurant at the end of the summer.
    • ‘It is a disgrace to see the Church where Wolfe Tone was baptised and where the famous preacher John Wesley gave sermons being deconsecrated and turned into a pub,’ Mr Cassidy said.
    • In 1880, at a time when enthusiasm for industrial invention was at its height, the museum was reorganized and the deconsecrated church nave converted into a magnificent space for exhibiting machines.
    • The altar was deconsecrated in 1964, and the rest of the church in 1967.
    • Curator Jan Hoet set the ninth edition of the Sonsbeek public art exhibition in the original park, a deconsecrated church and a shopping mall.
    • In countries outside India, temples have often been fashioned from converted premises, from schools, deconsecrated churches, homes, even factories.
    • I was a fan of this musical when it played in a deconsecrated church basement in the West End in 2002.
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更新时间:2024/9/19 9:40:20