i ia ib ic id ie if ig ih ii ik il im in io ip iq ir is it iu iv iw ix

Перевод: infidel speek infidel


[прилагательное]
языческий; неверный; неверующий;
[существительное]
атеист ; язычник


Тезаурус:

  1. But it was also a religious movement: the invasion by Christian knighthood of the infidel world; it aroused the savagery for which war in the name of religion has so often been the excuse.
  2. Each of them was shamefully hot with Democratic rage as regards politics, and Infidel as to religion.
  3. I am quite an Infidel about it, and shall never be converted."
  4. Coleridge was no infidel, but his imagination was not immune from this contagion.
  5. He took it up in a Pauline spirit, as a reparation; now the least of Christians (by special grace) but once an infidel, and even if he had not persecuted the faithful, one who scorned the Faith, he would do what he could to convert men or stop them from straying away.
  6. In Brick Lane, east London, the mosques are broadcasting fierce denunciations of infidel aggression; the newspaper-stands bristle with titles fulminating against American imperialism; youths in the street shout support for Saddam Hussein.
  7. Zealots may feel their blood quicken when they hear calls for a holy war; many of the imams who denounce the presence of infidel troops on Islamic soil know they owe their livelihoods to Saudi money.
  8. Turpin is no monk, but he is a Christian bishop: not only is he, as a feudal lord, a part of the military hierarchy of Charlemagne's realm, but he represents the unity of all segments of Christendom in the fight against the infidel.
  9. And so the mutual help and support which should have typified Christian brothers became a stick which the Western church used in the coming crusade to beat Orthodox and infidel alike.
  10. He presided at the councils of Piacenza and Clermont (1095), and preached with fervour war against the infidel, for the defence of Christendom and the recovery of the holy places.
  11. To Gregory VII holy war could be fought against any of God's enemies, whether infidel or Christian.
  12. This idea inspired knights from France to flock to the assistance of the struggling Christian kingdoms in northern Spain; but there was clearly a nice distinction between the attitude of men north of the Pyrenees, who regarded the Muslim as the wicked infidel, as cattle for the slaughter, and the Christians who had lived among them in Spain and who regarded them as misguided fellow-humans.
  13. Then he had inherited a romantic faith that one day God's own city, Jerusalem, where he had suffered and died and been buried, would be rescued from the infidel.

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