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mendicancy
[ men-di-kuhn-see ]
noun
- the practice of begging, as for alms.
- the state or condition of being a beggar.
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 苍辞苍路尘别苍顎僤颈路肠补苍路肠测 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of mendicancy1
Example Sentences
As the monastic system was increased, and especially after the mendicant orders had consecrated mendicancy, the evil assumed gigantic dimensions.
It cannot, I regret to say, be denied that mendicancy is very common in Ireland; so common as to be little less than a national scandal.
It was no part of Francis鈥檚 design that the friars should live by idle mendicancy, and we have seen that the Rule expresses the obligation to labor.
He recommended a life of religious mendicancy and voluntary poverty as absolutely necessary for admission to his kingdom.
This licensed mendicancy was finally suppressed by the Act of Parliament, passed in the thirty-ninth year of Queen Elizabeth鈥檚 reign, 鈥淔or the Suppressing of Rogues, Vagabonds, and Sturdy Beggars.鈥
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