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Black Friar   /blæk frˈaɪər/   Listen
Black Friar

noun
1.
A Roman Catholic friar wearing the black mantle of the Dominican order.  Synonyms: Blackfriar, Dominican, friar preacher.






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"Black friar" Quotes from Famous Books



... staring sad-eyed into the hurrying waters of the brook, there came to him the clicking of sandalled feet, and glancing up, he beheld one clad as a black friar. A fat man he was, jolly of figure and mightily round; his nose was bulbous and he ...
— Beltane The Smith • Jeffery Farnol

... myself. I did want to spend the night in the cabinet of Isaiah Savvich, but it's a pity to lose such a splendid morning. I'm thinking of taking a bath, and then I'll get on a steamer and ride to the Lipsky monastery to a certain tippling black friar ...
— Yama (The Pit) • Alexandra Kuprin

... at the Cross that day was a Black Friar—a tall spare man, whom some might call gaunt and ungainly; a man of quick intelligence and radiant eyes, of earnest gesture and burning words. No idle monastic reveller this, but a man of one object, of one idea, full of zeal and determination. His ...
— For the Master's Sake - A Story of the Days of Queen Mary • Emily Sarah Holt

... because it includes a chapter on derivations from the Greek; and a very large book, the Catholicon (c. 1286), partly a grammar and partly a dictionary, with copious quotations from Latin classics, which had been compiled with some skill and care by John Balbi, a Genoese Black Friar. Papias and Hugutio were sharply condemned by Friar Bacon, but they remained in use long after his time, and Balbi owed much to both of them. Many copies of the Catholicon seem to have been made, although the transcription of so large a book ...
— Old English Libraries, The Making, Collection, and Use of Books • Ernest A. Savage

... him hold the closer. Many were the means shouted out in mouthfuls of the best possible ways of ending it. "Water!" but there was none near, and many cried for it who might have got it from the well at Blackfriar's Wynd. "Bite the tail!" and a large, vague, benevolent, middle-aged man, more desirous than wise, with some struggle got the bushy end of Yarrow's tail into his ample mouth and bit it with all his ...
— The Great English Short-Story Writers, Vol. 1 • Various



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