RECLUSION - translation to arabic
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RECLUSION - translation to arabic

PERSON WHO LIVES IN VOLUNTARY SECLUSION FROM THE PUBLIC AND SOCIETY
Reclusiveness; Reclusive; Recluses; Reclusion
  • Cell of a recluse with hagioscope in Bro church on Gotland

RECLUSION         

ألاسم

حَبيس ; زَاهِد ; زَهَّاد ; عاكِف ; مُتَقَشِّف ; مُتَقَوْقِع ; مُتَنَسِّك ; مُتَوَحِّد ; مَحْبُوس ; مُعْتَكِف ; مُنْعَزِل ; ناسِك

reclusion         
N
تنسك عزلة سجن
recluse         
اسْم : الناسك . المتنسّك

Definition

Reclusion
·noun A state of retirement from the world; seclusion.

Wikipedia

Recluse

A recluse is a person who lives in voluntary seclusion from the public and society. The word is from the Latin recludere, which means "shut up" or "sequester". Historically, the word referred to a Christian hermit's total isolation from the world, with examples including Symeon of Trier, who lived within the great Roman gate Porta Nigra with permission from the Archbishop of Trier, or Theophan the Recluse, the 19th-century Orthodox Christian monk who was later venerated as a saint. Many celebrated figures of human history have spent significant portions of their lives as recluses.

In the Russian Orthodox and Catholic Church tradition, a Poustinik is a temporary hermit who has been called to pray and fast alone in a cabin for at least 24 hours. In ancient Chinese culture, scholars are encouraged to be a public servant in a scrupulous and well-run government but expected to go into reclusion as a yinshi (隐士, 'gentleman-in-hiding') when the government is rife with corruption. Others, like Dongfang Shuo, became hermits to practice Taoism, or in later centuries, Chan Buddhism.

Examples of use of RECLUSION
1. Hezbollah secretary general Hassan Nasrallah ended his public reclusion for a few minutes yesterday, appearing in person at the Beirut celebration for the freed prisoners.
2. Tojo was convicted on counts of waging wars of aggression against the Allies and China and of authorizing inhumane treatment of prisoners of war and others forced his family into decades of reclusion so profound that letters were mailed to them under a different name.
3. However, as the last writer to have been granted an audience with the enigmatic Maharishi – and, indeed, the only journalist to have been invited inside the strange "alternative nation" where he lived his final years in reclusion – I know who I tend to believe.
4. Tojo was convicted on counts of waging wars of aggression against the Allies and China and of authorising inhumane treatment of prisoners of war and others forced his family into decades of reclusion so profound that letters were mailed to them under a different name.