phylactery

suomi-englanti sanakirja

phylactery englannista suomeksi

  1. raamatunlausekotelo, fylakteerio

  1. Substantiivi

  2. tefillin

  3. amuletti

  4. tekstinauha

phylactery englanniksi

  1. (senseid) Either of two small leather cases containing scrolls with passages from the Torah, traditionally worn by a Jewish man (one on the arm (usually the left) and one on the forehead) and now sometimes by a woman at certain morning prayers as a reminder to obey the law as out in the Bible; a tefilla.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (RQ:Tyndale NT) work&42861; (quote-gloss) they do&11805; for to be ſene of men. They ſett abroade there philateris&11805; and make large borders on there garmentt&42861; (quote-gloss)&11805; (..)|footer=This is the only occurrence of the word in the Bible.

  4. (RQ:Erasmus Newe Testamente) walke vp and doune bearyng about brode Philacteries, they go with broad ⁊ gorgiouſe imbroderinges, and ſhewe furth the commaundementes of the lawe written in them, where as in their lyfe they neuer appeare.

  5. (RQ:King James Version) workes they doe, for to be ſeene of men: they make broad their phylacteries, and enlarge the borders of their garments, (..)

  6. (RQ:Tatler) Popery sat Judaism, represented by an old man embroidered with phylacteries, and distinguished by many typical figures, which I had not skill enough to unriddle.

  7. (RQ:Scott Kenilworth)

  8. (RQ:Zangwill Children of the Ghetto) It meant praying brazenly in crowded railway trains, winding the phylacteries sevenfold round his left arm, and crowning his forehead with a huge leather bump of righteousness, to the bewilderment or irritation of unsympathetic fellow-passengers.

  9. (quote-book) (2) Another was to be bound in the center of the forehead, (..) Every male, who at the age of 13 becomes a "son of the Law" (''bar miçwāh''), must wear the phylactery and perform the accompanying ceremonial.

  10. (quote-book)|location=Jerusalem, Israel&59; Nanuet, N.Y.|publisher=Feldheim Publishers|volume=I (A to Eld)|page=787|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=aaklGZAID08C&pg=PA787|column=1|isbn=978-1-58330-592-8|passage=Some Rabbis allow a woman or a minor who are themselves not obligated to put on phylacteries to ''assist a hospitalized patient to don his phylacteries'' if he is otherwise unable to do so. (..) Some Rabbis rule that no woman can put on phylacteries for a male patient because women are themselves not obligated to don phylacteries.

  11. A of faith, or religious or traditional observance; also, a reminder.

  12. (RQ:Milton Tetrachordon) I ſend him back again for a ''phylactery'' to ſtitch upon his arrogance, that cenſures not onely before conviction ſo bitterly vvithout ſo much as one reaſon giv'n, but cenſures the Congregation of his Governors to their faces, for not being ſo haſty as himſelf to cenſure.

  13. (RQ:Browne Christian Morals)

  14. (RQ:Landon Lady Anne Granard)

  15. (senseid) A fringe which an Israelite was required to wear as a reminder to obey the law as set out in the Bible; any fringe or border.

  16. (quote-book)|chapter=Of Obelisks|title=The History of Many Memorable Things Lost, which were in Use among the Ancients: And an Account of Many Excellent Things Found, Now in Use among the Moderns, both Natural and Artificial.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) John Nicholson(nb...), and sold by (w)(nb...)|page=97|pageurl=https://books.google.com.sg/books?id=piN7p3_FLUoC&pg=PA97|oclc=4827619|passage=This Fabrick vvas ſo ſtupendous, as that vvhen King Cambyses II|''Cambyſes'' (quote-gloss) had ſack'd and raz'd ''Syene'', and the Flames had rambled to the Borders and the ''Phylacteries (as it vvere) of this ''Obelisk'', he commanded the Fire to be extinguiſh'd, being ſtruck vvith Admiration of ſo venerable a Pile.

  17. (RQ:B. Taylor Prince Deukalion)

  18. (synonym of)

  19. (quote-book)'', dating from the mid-fifteenth century, a (w)-like figure named Cleopes equips her beloved knight Amoryus of Thessaly with various forms of magic in order to battle against the dragon. (..) Amoryus's magic aids include a "Phylactery" (stanza 206, line 1423).

  20. An enchanted object used (for example, by a lich) to contain and protect the owner's soul.

  21. (quote-book)

  22. (quote-book)|location=States|publisher=InfiniBadger Press|page=121|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=nTVpDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA121|isbn=978-1-945826-08-5|passage=Liches are tough bastards. Usually, they're magic users that have messed around with necromancy and been able to transplant their soul into a phylactery, which is basically a magic jar that allows the soul to survive disconnected from the body. (..) Destroying the lich without destroying the phylactery first just allows the lich to regenerate its body over time (or steal someone else's) and it really pisses them off. With the intense connection a lich has with its phylactery if it gets destroyed the lich will know instantly.

  23. (senseid) A scroll with words on it depicted as emerging from a person's mouth or held in their hands, indicating what they are singing or speaking; a banderole, a scroll.

  24. (RQ:Hardy Pair of Blue Eyes)

  25. (RQ:Buchan Blanket)

  26. (quote-book) Devils and corrupt politicians were more likely seen to speak using phylacteries, whereas virtuous characters were more often depicted as silent.

  27. (quote-book) Barlow's, but they are not a means of dramatization; it is as if the characters, instead of talking to each other, were talking to the reader in order to state their intentions, make witty comments, or explain the situation.

  28. A list or record.

  29. (quote-book)'s vices—wily, wary, cold, calculating, indirect, faithless. In act, treacherous and cruel.

  30. (quote-book), Marie of Oignies, and the Treasures of Oignies|editors=Fulton Brown|Rachel Fulton; Holsinger|Bruce W. Holsinger|title=History in the Comic Mode: Medieval Communities and the Matter of Person|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Columbia University Press|section=part IV (The Matter of Person)|page=209|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/historyincomicmo0000unse/page/209/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-231-13368-5|passage=After of Oignies|Marie (quote-gloss) was exhumed around 1226, another of her fingers was placed in a phylactery that was created by Hugo d'Oignies|Hugh of Oignies and remained at Oignies until 1817(nb..).