hermits in English

noun
1
a person living in solitude as a religious discipline.
Secular idleness would have little meaning in solitude, and the religious contemplation of the hermit or monk is not in question here.
2
a hummingbird found in the shady lower layers of tropical forests, foraging along a regular route.
A local guide took us out the first morning for a half-day of birding, including a visit to a lek of performing green hermit hummingbirds, and then got us on our way to the Canopy Tower, a short distance north of the city.

Use "hermits" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hermits" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hermits", or refer to the context using the word "hermits" in the English Dictionary.

1. “HERMITS donned iron shackles, chains, barbed girdles and spiked collars . . .

2. In Roman Catholicism: Hermits and monks …God by prolonged, almost constant Contemplation.

3. Synonyms for Anchorites include eremites, hermits, recluses, ascetics, isolates, solitary, cenobites, marabouts, santons and stylites

4. Commoners include peasants, serfs, slaves, servants, pilgrims, merchants, artisans, and hermits.

5. Commoner Commoners include peasants, serfs, Slaves, servants, pilgrims, merchants, artisans, and hermits.

6. Also patron of amputees, basketweavers, gravediggers, and hermits; he is invoked against eczema.

7. Augustinian definition is - a member of an Augustinian order; specifically : a friar of the Hermits of St

8. Hermits in their cells may have prayer ropes with as many as 300 or 500 knots in them.

9. The Carmelite Order was founded by 12th century hermits who wanted to devote their lives wholly to contemplation

10. Anchorites and Anchoresses were a subclass of religious hermits, who lived entirely enclosed lives, in locked cells adjoining churches.

11. Anon is the hive mind of deviant fantasies and crude jokes inhabiting the subconscious of hermits, burnouts, stoners and suicidal shut-ins everywhere

12. William of saint thierry's encomium to the early Carthusian hermits, the Golden Epistle to the Carthusians of Mont-Dieu, testifies to the degree to

13. Augustine. More specifically, the name is used to designate members of two main branches of Augustinians—namely, the Augustinian Canons and the Augustinian Hermits, with their female offshoots.

14. The term "anchor" was being used for religious hermits about 450 years before "Anchorite" came into common use in our language

15. The ultimate sanctuary of the hermits is to be found in the settlement of Karoúlia, perched high in the dizzying cliffs on the end of Mount Athos.

16. Whilst Anchorites are frequently considered to be a type of religious hermit,unlike hermits they were required to take a vow of stability of place, opting instead for …

17. The Carthusians, who played an important role in the monastic-reform movement of the 11th and 12th centuries, combine the solitary life of hermits with a common life within the…

18. Anchoritic monks pursued asceticism and spiritual growth by withdrawing from society and living in solitude as hermits, whereas cenobitic monks pursued the same ideals by living together with other monks in a communal home

19. The second kind is that of the Anchorites, that is the hermits, those who have learned to fight against the devil, not by the new fervor of conversion, but by a long

20. The large number of caves in the Latmos mountains provided refuge to ‘Cloisterers’ (recluses) and eremites (hermits), driven out of Sinai and Southern Arabia in the 7th century to search refuge in the Latmos mountains

21. The early Christian hermits, Ascetics and monks known as the “Desert Fathers” who lived mainly in the Scetes desert of Egypt in 3 CE were a major influence on the development of Christianity

22. Anchorites are often considered to be a type of religious hermit, unlike hermits, Anchorites had to make a promise to God to stay in one place, which was a very small room, either

23. Whereas the eremitic monks ("hermits") lived alone in a monastery consisting of merely a hut or cave ("cell"), the Cenobitic monks ("cenobites") lived together in monasteries comprising one …

24. The first is a generic reference to anyone who has received consecration into any of the four forms of Consecrated life that is mediated by the Church: religious, hermits, sacred virgins, or members of secular institutes

25. Welcome to my Curmudgeonesque page! Here you will find both Curmudgeonly quotes (quotations of sarcasm, cynicism, pessimism, misery, ennui, crankiness, apathy, melancholy, negativity, and those about misanthropy, complaining, etc., said by grumps, hermits, and other garden

26. According to Swami Parmeshwaranand, although the Avatars of Vishnu are countless in number and include hermits, Manus, sons of Manus, and other Devas (gods), due to the curse of a Rishi called Bhrgu most are only partial (i.e

27. Anchorites are often considered to be a type of religious hermit, unlike hermits, Anchorites had to make a promise to God to stay in one place, which was a very small room, either attached to, or within the wall of, a local church

28. Featuring translated extracts from a wide range of Latin, Middle English and Old French sources, as well as a scholarly introduction and commentary from one of the foremost experts in the field, Hermits and Anchorites in England is an invaluable resource for students and lecturers alike.

29. The Birth of Athonite Monasticism in North America Situated on a steep and rocky peninsula in Northern Greece, Mount Athos is an autonomous monastic federation comprising twenty major monasteries, dozens of smaller monastic dwellings, and even a few hermits hidden among the crags and cliffs of its shores.

30. Cenobitic (also spelled coenobitic) is the name associated with the monastic tradition that emphases regulated community life, that is, in which the monks live together under a set of rules established by the ruling abbot. The opposite style of monasticism is called eremitic, in which monks live in isolation as hermits.

31. Knights Cenobium am i the only thinking about these Cenobites here ? *Activates killjoy mode* Cenobites are monks who live in religious community rather than alone as hermits (mostly used as a term in the Greek Orthodoxy in the modern day and the English word is derived from the Greek work meaning community life)