Genuflect - ορισμός. Τι είναι το Genuflect
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Τι (ποιος) είναι Genuflect - ορισμός

HUMAN POSITIONS
Genuflect; Genuflexion; Bending the knee; Bend the knee; Genuflections; Genuflexions; Genuflexio; Bending of the knee; Genuflects; Genuflected; Genuflecting; Genuflex; Metany
  • Traditionally [[marriage proposal]]s use genuflection
  • [[Manuel II of Portugal]] during Missa de Campanha, c. 1910
  • Genuflection on one knee, during a Catholic Mass

Genuflect         
·vi To bend the knee, as in worship.
genuflect         
(genuflects, genuflecting, genuflected)
1.
If you genuflect, you bend one or both knees and bow, especially in church, as a sign of respect. (FORMAL)
He genuflected in front of the altar.
VERB: V
2.
You can say that someone is genuflecting to something when they are giving it a great deal of attention and respect, especially if you think it does not deserve this. (mainly JOURNALISM)
They refrained from genuflecting to the laws of political economy.
= bow down
VERB: V to n, also V prep [disapproval]
genuflect         
['d??nj?fl?kt]
¦ verb lower one's body briefly by bending one knee to the ground in worship or as a sign of respect.
Derivatives
genuflection (also genuflexion) noun
genuflector noun
Origin
C17 (earlier (ME) as genuflection): from eccles. L. genuflectere, from L. genu 'knee' + flectere 'to bend'.

Βικιπαίδεια

Genuflection

Genuflection or genuflexion is the act of bending a knee to the ground, as distinguished from kneeling which more strictly involves both knees. From early times, it has been a gesture of deep respect for a superior. Today, the gesture is common in the Christian religious practices of the Anglican Church, Lutheran Church, Catholic Church, and Western Rite Orthodox Church. The Latin word genuflectio, from which the English word is derived, originally meant kneeling with both knees rather than the rapid dropping to one knee and immediately rising that became customary in Western Europe in the Middle Ages. It is often referred to as "going down on one knee" or "bowing the knee". In Western culture, one genuflects on the left knee to a human dignitary, whether ecclesiastical or civil, while, in Christian churches and chapels, one genuflects on the right knee when the Sacrament is not exposed but in a tabernacle or veiled (conversely, one kneels with both knees if the Sacrament is exposed).

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Genuflect
1. Republican politicians with national ambitions genuflect to Keene at his Conservative Political Action Conference.
2. With that in mind, the NCAA appears to be going beyond a genuflect to political correctness, to doing what‘s right.
3. You may find yourself in a family that has never mentioned God but which suddenly teaches you to genuflect.
4. Democrats, who consider equality the value before which the virtuous genuflect, worry that their nomination might be settled by "superdelegates," who are more equal than others.
5. Genuflect before David Beckham while picking on Michael Owen for his inability to score from passes that sailed over his head. 5.