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[ UK /ɪɹˈɛma‍ɪt/ ]
NOUN
  1. a Christian recluse

How To Use eremite In A Sentence

  • It is a romantic faith, and he observed it with the discipline of an eremite monk.
  • The former cloistral building of the ‘Augustiner-Eremiten’ with its Gothic cloister and its high church room creates an impressive atmosphere.
  • To conclude in [3848] Hierom's words, I will ask our magnificoes that build with marble, and bestow a whole manor on a thread, what difference between them and Paul the Eremite, that bare old man? Anatomy of Melancholy
  • The eremite acts alone and has reasons you will understand later. Richard Hartz writes under the pseudonym of Angiras
  • After all, she wasn't an anchorite - or was it an eremite - with her thoughts as her raison d'être. A DEAD LIBERTY
  • He lived in the 10th and 11th centuries as an eremite monk near the Sazava River.
  • After all, she wasn't an anchorite - or was it an eremite - with her thoughts as her raison d'être. A DEAD LIBERTY
  • Where was a dignified predicament any a singular faced, a eremite visualisation Macbeth felt with such agony in a play's late scenes? Archive 2009-11-01
  • The story or a part of it is told by a fellow-seaman of Columbus, who had turned "eremite" in his old age, and though the narrative itself is in heroic verse, the prologue and epilogue, as they may be termed, are in The Works of Lord Byron. Vol. 3
  • A cenobite is usually a monk in a monastery, as opposed to an anchorite, who is a monk living alone (also called an ‘eremite’ or ‘hermit’).
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