take vows
English
Verb
- (Christianity) To become an officially inducted member of a religious order, such as an order of priests, nuns, or monks.
- 1903, Harold MacGrath, chapter 34, in The Grey Cloak:
- And this was the hour Brother Jacques had planned and waited for! For this moment he had donned the robes, isolated himself, taken vows, suffered physical tortures!
- 1919, Willa Cather, "Scandal":
- "Even painters . . . try to make all women look like some wife or mistress. You are all the same; you never see our real faces. . . . I'd rather take vows and veil my face for ever from such abominable eyes."
- 2001 Dec. 30, Michelle O'Donnell, "The Life Serene," New York Times (retrieved 26 Nov 2012):
- A cloister is the part of the monastery that only those who have taken vows may enter.
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See also
- vow of celibacy
- vow of chastity
- vow of poverty
- vow of silence
References
- take vows at OneLook Dictionary Search
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