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absolution

/ab-suh-loo-shuhn/US // ˌæb səˈlu ʃən //UK // (ˌæbsəˈluːʃən) //

赦免权,赦免,赦免令,赦免书

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : act of absolving; a freeing from blame or guilt; release from consequences, obligations, or penalties.
    • : state of being absolved.
    • : Roman Catholic Theology. a remission of sin or of the punishment for sin, made by a priest in the sacrament of penance on the ground of authority received from Christ.the formula declaring such remission.
    • : Protestant Theology. a declaration or assurance of divine forgiveness to penitent believers, made after confession of sins.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Like many of Schrader’s antiheroes, from Taxi Driver’s Travis Bickle to the eco-conscious Pastor Ernst Toller of First Reformed, William is a haunted diarist in search of absolution.

  • The full 108 takes most pilgrims about four full days, a relatively small fee for absolute absolution.

  • Then he threw in one that seemed to me an odd item for which to seek absolution: technological innovation.

  • Revising the second novel, Fallen Land, after the reviews were out for Absolution made it a much less overwhelming process.

  • What drew you to South Africa as the setting for Absolution?

  • My agent suggested I try to have a completed draft of a second novel before Absolution was published.

  • When I was writing Absolution, I knew almost no other writers of fiction, and felt a distinct lack of community.

  • “Well, mistakes is humant,” sighed Sol, taking advantage of that universal absolution.

  • In the course of time, absolution for the sacrilege was obtained from the Pope; but my father could never obtain it from himself.

  • The friars had power of absolution, independently of the bishop; and it was a bitter grievance.

  • During the night he was visited by the Prior of the Dominicans, from whom, having made confession, he received absolution.

  • But the terms of this secret and the conditions of my absolution are peculiar.