chapel: [13] Chapel has a very specific source: it was originally applied to the shrine built to preserve the cloak (late Latin cappa) of St Martin of Tours as a holy relic. The diminutive form of cappa was cappella, and this came to be applied to the building itself, gradually being broadened out subsequently to any moderately sized place of worship. The word reached English via Old French chapele. The church functionary who guarded St Martin’s cloak was known by the derivative term cappellānus, source of English chaplain [12]. => chaplain
chapel (n.)
early 13c., from Old French chapele (12c., Modern French chapelle), from Medieval Latin cappella "chapel, sanctuary for relics," literally "little cape," diminutive of Late Latin cappa "cape" (see cap (n.)); by tradition, originally in reference to the sanctuary in France in which the miraculous cape of St. Martin of Tours, patron saint of France, was preserved; meaning extended in most European languages to "any sanctuary." (While serving Rome as a soldier deployed in Gaul, Martin cut his military coat in half to share it with a ragged beggar. That night, Martin dreamed Christ wearing the half-cloak; the half Martin kept was the relic.)
雙語例句
1. Sister Francesca entered the chapel, took her seat, and promptly fell asleep.
弗朗西絲卡修女走進小教堂,坐下來,很快就睡著了。
來自柯林斯例句
2. His recently completed chapel for Fitzwilliam is attracting favourable comment.
他最近為菲茨威廉建成的小教堂贏得了好評。
來自柯林斯例句
3. The paintings in the chapel were perhaps a thousand years old.
小教堂裏的這些畫可能有1,000年的曆史了。
來自柯林斯例句
4. You will see the chapel on the hill to your left.
你會看見那座小教堂在你左側的山上。
來自柯林斯例句
5. Architecturally, the chapel would be the perfect match for the school.