eremite


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  • noun

Antonyms for eremite

a Christian recluse

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
In it were poems by Li Po ("the high heavenly priest of the White Lake," Charles calls him in "Portrait of the Artist with Li Po"), Tu Fu, T'ao Ch'ien, and Wang Wei--master eremites all.
In opposition to the "achieved self" of the eremite, Harpham argues, the cenobite is characterized as a "subtracted self," as a carbon copy emptied of individuated identity (28).
The muzzle blast and flash that would normally eremite from such a short barrel is virtually eliminated by a special muzzle-mounted device known as a VortX flash suppressor and compensator.
That's precisely what the young painter Julian does, forswearing experience as compulsively as an eremite, and Skillings never calls him on it.
Langland's apparent object in constructing his persona 'as an itinerant eremite' was 'to show how difficult it is to remain true to the primitive rules of both the itinerant and eremitical orders' (173).
For Mr Punch 1938: `was the year when the premier flew/Over the sea on his sporting flight/To the Berchtesgaden eremite ...' Throughout the year a sceptical, increasingly worried Mr Punch closely followed the course of appeasement.
Basil, the 14th century eremite has become a kind of standard for later Russian fools and was so popular the cathedral of the intersession (Pokrovskii Sobor) on Moscow's Red Square, easily the nation's most recognizable building, became commonly known as St.
Kevin the eremite in Finnegans Wake, we see that the end of Ulysses does not mark the culmination of Yeats-related anxiety in Joyce's work.
Eremite, 1985); and Flowers and Insects (London: Faber, 1986).
The Fredettes said that the eremite must struggle in U.S.