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discalced    
a. 赤脚的,仅穿拖鞋的



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  • Discalced - Wikipedia
    A discalced ( dɪsˈkælst , dis-KALST) religious order is one whose members go barefoot or wear sandals These orders are often distinguished on this account from other branches of the same order The custom of going unshod was introduced into the West by Saint Francis of Assisi for men and by Saint Clare of Assisi for women
  • DISCALCED Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
    The meaning of DISCALCED is unshod, barefoot How to use discalced in a sentence
  • What does it mean when a religious order is “discalced”?
    To be “discalced” is to go without footwear or only wear sandals Various religious congregations practice discalceation as a penance, as a way to demonstrate their devotion to the Faith, or, like the wearing of the habit, to represent their separation from the world
  • DISCALCED Definition Meaning - Dictionary. com
    Discalced definition: (chiefly of members of certain religious orders) without shoes; unshod; barefoot See examples of DISCALCED used in a sentence
  • Discalced | Catholic Answers Encyclopedia
    The Discalced Franciscans or Alcantarines, who prior to 1897 formed a distinct branch of the Franciscan Order went without footwear of any kind The followers of St Clare at first went barefoot, but later came to wear sandals and even shoes
  • Question #5: What does Discalced mean? — The Carmel of Mary . . .
    Discalced simply means “unshod ” “Calceus” is the Latin for “shoe” and “dis” means “without ” When St Teresa began her reformed branch of the Carmelites, she wanted a life of greater poverty and so instead of wearing shoes, which were very expensive at that time, and still are, she decided that her Nuns and Friars would
  • discalced, adj. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English . . .
    The earliest known use of the adjective discalced is in the early 1600s OED's earliest evidence for discalced is from 1615, in a translation by Edward Grimeston, translator discalced is a borrowing from Latin , combined with an English element; originally modelled on a French lexical item
  • Directory of Monasteries of Cloistered Nuns — Cloistered Life
    The Discalced Carmelite Nuns of the Monastery of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Ada, Michigan (formerly the Carmel of Grand Rapids), was founded in 1916 from Queretaro, Mexico when the 16 Carmelite Nuns from that Carmel fled to the United States during the persecution of the Church during the Mexican Civil War
  • discalced - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
    discalced (not comparable) (Roman Catholicism) Pertaining to a religious order that historically forswore the wearing of shoes [from 17th c ]
  • What does Discalced mean? - Definitions. net
    Discalced refers to the practice, often in religious orders or sects, of going barefoot or wearing sandals or very simple shoes as an act of austerity or humility It comes from the Latin word "discalceatus," which means "without shoes "





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