liturgical
/lɪˈtɜːdʒɪkl/ (bre, ipa) · /lɪˈtɜːrdʒɪkl/ (ame, ipa) · /lə-ˈtər-ji-kəl li-/ (ame, mw)
liturgical — 形容詞
- liturgicalpositive
- more liturgicalcomparative
- most liturgicalsuperlative
1. relating to the set pattern of prayers, songs, readings, and rituals that a reli
禮儀的
與宗教禮拜儀式相關的
relating to the set pattern of prayers, songs, readings, and rituals that a religious community follows when they gather for formal worship, especially in Christian churches where the order of service follows a fixed tradition
Valentina learned the liturgical songs by heart after years in the church choir.
華倫蒂娜在教會詩班多年後,已將禮儀歌曲熟記在心。
collocation: liturgical songs / liturgical music
Easter Sunday is the most important day in the Christian liturgical calendar.
復活節主日是基督教禮儀年曆中最重要的一天。
collocation: liturgical calendar / liturgical year
Theo found a rare book of liturgical texts used in Catholic Mass for centuries.
提奧找到了一本罕見的禮儀經書,在彌撒中使用了數百年。
The liturgical reforms of the 1960s changed how many churches run their services.
一九六〇年代的禮儀改革改變了許多教會舉行禮拜的方式。
Hiroshi compared the liturgical traditions of Buddhist temples with those of Christian churches.
宏比較了佛教寺廟和基督教教堂的禮儀傳統。
- ritual
broader than liturgical — ritual can describe any repeated formal action in religion, culture, or daily life; liturgical is specifically tied to the fixed worship format of a church or religious community
- ceremonial
even broader — describes any formal ceremony, not necessarily religious; a presidential inauguration is ceremonial but not liturgical
- sacramental
narrower — relates specifically to Christian sacraments (baptism, communion, etc.); a subset of what is liturgical
用法筆記
Liturgical is almost always used before a noun (attributive position). It refers specifically to the formal, prescribed elements of public worship, not to private prayer or informal gatherings. The word is most common in discussions of Christian worship but can describe formal ceremonies in other religions too.