pulpit 的定义
- a platform or raised structure in a church, from which the sermon is delivered or the service is conducted.
- the pulpit, the clerical profession; the ministry.members of the clergy collectively: In attendance were representatives of medicine, the pulpit, and the bar.
- the position of pastor or rabbi: He heard of a pulpit in Chicago that was about to be vacated.
- the work of a preacher; preaching.
- bully pulpit.
- a safety rail rising about 18 to 30 inches from the deck near the bow and extending around it.a similar rail at the stern.
- a control booth in a factory, usually elevated and glass-enclosed, from which an operator can observe and direct the manufacturing process.
pulpit 近义词
structure from which sermon is given
更多pulpit例句
- It can’t just be talking points, it can’t just be words from a pulpit, you have to put action behind it.
- The broadcasts have become a pulpit for the president’s verbal attacks against those who disagree with him.
- Gloria made clear he will use his mayoral pulpit to champion the plan.
- A Belgian church has a chalkboard sitting at the pulpit with the jungle peeking through the windows behind it.
- Reinke lost his pulpit and was drummed out of the conservative Missouri Synod of the Lutheran denomination.
- He is also accused of using the pulpit to further a cult of personality surrounding himself.
- To Hice, I suppose, speaking the “biblical truth” means endorsing John McCain from the pulpit, like he did in 2008.
- Look, Hice has every right to spew his hate from the pulpit to those who chose to attend his services.
- Samuel Badcock, an English divine and writer, died; admired as a pulpit orator and a man of literary talent.
- "It has been a most merciful escape," Maloney said, his pulpit voice struggling with his emotion.
- A mob attacked him in the pulpit; the military fired upon the people, and 10 persons were killed and 16 wounded.
- The lectern, as the pulpit-stand in English churches is called, was fashioned of oak taken from Nelson's flagship, the Victory.
- Against plays, players, and playgoers they waged in pulpit and pamphlet a warfare characterized by the most intense fanaticism.