pontifex

英 ['pɒntɪfeks] 美 ['pɑntɪfɛks]
  • n. (古罗马宗教的)大祭司;教皇
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pontifex (n.)
member of the supreme college of priests in ancient Rome, 1570s, from Latin pontifex "high priest, chief of the priests," probably from pont-, stem of pons "bridge" (see pons) + -fex, -ficis, root of facere "make" (see factitious). If so, the word originally meant "bridge-maker," or "path-maker."

Weekley points out that, "bridge-building has always been regarded as a pious work of divine inspiration." Or the term may be metaphoric of bridging the earthly world and the realm of the gods. Other suggestions trace it to Oscan-Umbrian puntis "propitiary offering," or to a lost Etruscan word, in either case altered by folk etymology to resemble the Latin for "bridge-maker." In Old English, pontifex is glossed in the Durham Ritual (Old Northumbrian dialect) as brycgwyrcende "bridge-maker."
1. From then, I become Paul, neither the aged pontifex nor the royal member with noblest blood.
之后, 我就成了保罗,但我不是古老的那个教皇, 也不是血液高贵的王室.

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