Mysticism
['mɪstɪsɪz(ə)m] or ['mɪstɪsɪzəm]
解释:
(noun.) obscure or irrational thought.
(noun.) a religion based on mystical communion with an ultimate reality.
录入:皮埃尔--From WordNet
解释:
(n.) Obscurity of doctrine.
(n.) The doctrine of the Mystics, who professed a pure, sublime, and wholly disinterested devotion, and maintained that they had direct intercourse with the divine Spirit, and aquired a knowledge of God and of spiritual things unattainable by the natural intellect, and such as can not be analyzed or explained.
(n.) The doctrine that the ultimate elements or principles of knowledge or belief are gained by an act or process akin to feeling or faith.
贾维斯整理
例句:
- There is a vein of mysticism in American life, and Mr. Bryan is its uncritical prophet. 沃尔特·李普曼. 政治序论.
- That is a beautiful mysticism--it is a-- Please not to call it by any name, said Dorothea, putting out her hands entreatingly. 乔治·艾略特. 米德尔马契.
- Beneath the rule of this dirty mysticism, indolence and scoundrelism mismanaged the war. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯. 世界史纲.
- In every way except the mysticism. 弗格斯·休姆. 奇幻岛.
克劳德特录入