Celė (lot. cella – „kambarėlis“) – įvariose religijose mažos uždaros patalpos, naudojamos kaip krikščionių, budizmo ar kitų religijų vienuolio gyvenamasis kambarys.
Ке́лья или ке́ллия (из ср.-греч. κελλίον, множ. -ία, κέλλα, от лат. сеllа — «комната, чулан»; др.-русск келиɪа) — жилище монаха, обычно отдельная комната в монастыре.
На Афоне келлией также называют отдельную постройку из нескольких комнат, не находящуюся в подчинении скита.
Скит (греч. Σκήτη) — в христианстве уединённое жилище отшельника, самостоятельное или структурно выделенное в монастыре. Название происходит от Скитской пусты́ни — места первоначального распространения монашества.
Wadi El Natrun (Arabic for "Natron Valley"; Coptic: "Measure of the Hearts", Greek: Σκετις or Σκετες "The Ascetics") is a valley located in Beheira Governorate, Egypt, including a town with the same name. The name refers to the presence of eight different lakes in the region that produce natron salt.
In Christian literature it is usually known as Scetis and is one of the three early Christian monastic centers located in the desert of the northwestern Nile Delta.
Asketizmas.
ascetic (adj.)
1640s, from Gk. asketikos "rigorously self-disciplined, laborious," from asketes "monk, hermit," earlier "one who practices an art or trade," from askein "to exercise, train," originally "to train for athletic competition, practice gymnastics, exercise." The noun meaning "one of the early Christians who retired to the desert to live solitary lives of meditation and prayer" is from 1670s.
Ascetic Discourses.
Ar jie nieko nebeieškojo?
ask
O.E. ascian "ask, call for an answer; make a request," from earlier ahsian, from P.Gmc. *aiskojan (cf. O.S. escon, O.Fris. askia "request, demand, ask," M.Du. eiscen, Du. eisen "to ask, demand," O.H.G. eiscon "to ask (a question)," Ger. heischen "to ask, demand"), from PIE *ais- "to wish, desire" (cf. Skt. icchati "seeks, desires," Arm. aic "investigation," O.C.S. iskati "to seek," Lith. ieškau "to seek"). Form in English influenced by a Scandinavian form of the word (cf. Dan. æske; the O.E. would have evolved by normal sound changes into ash, esh, which was a Midlands and s.w. England dialect form). Modern dialectal ax is as old as O.E. acsian and was an accepted literary variant until c.1600. Related: Asked; asking. O.E. also had fregnan, frignan which carried more directly the sense of "question, inquire," and is from PIE root *prek-, the common source of words for "ask" in most I.E. languages (see pray). If you ask me "in my opinion" is attested from 1910. Asking price is attested from 1755.
Ieškojimas.
2012-04-22
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