Pastoral


[pas-ter-uh l, pah-ster-] /ˈpæs tər əl, ˈpɑ stər-/

adjective
1.
having the simplicity, charm, serenity, or other characteristics generally attributed to rural areas:
pastoral scenery; the pastoral life.
2.
pertaining to the country or to life in the country; rural; rustic.
3.
portraying or suggesting idyllically the life of shepherds or of the country, as a work of literature, art, or music:
pastoral poetry; a pastoral symphony.
4.
of, relating to, or consisting of shepherds.
5.
of or relating to a or the duties of a :
pastoral visits to a hospital.
6.
used for pasture, as land.
noun
7.
a poem, play, or the like, dealing with the life of shepherds, commonly in a conventional or artificial manner, or with simple rural life generally; a bucolic.
8.
a picture or work of art representing the shepherds’ life.
9.
Music. .
10.
a treatise on the duties of a .
11.
a letter to the people from their spiritual .
12.
a letter to the clergy or people of an ecclesiastical district from its bishop.
13.
Also called pastoral staff. (def 1).
/ˈpɑːstərəl/
adjective
1.
of, characterized by, or depicting rural life, scenery, etc
2.
(of a literary work) dealing with an idealized form of rural existence in a conventional way
3.
(of land) used for pasture
4.
denoting or relating to the branch of theology dealing with the duties of a clergyman or priest to his congregation
5.
of or relating to a clergyman or priest in charge of a congregation or his duties as such
6.
of or relating to a teacher’s responsibility for the personal, as the distinct from the educational, development of pupils
7.
of or relating to shepherds, their work, etc
noun
8.
a literary work or picture portraying rural life, esp the lives of shepherds in an idealizing way See also eclogue
9.
(music) a variant of pastorale
10.
(Christianity)

adj.

“of or pertaining to shepherds,” early 15c., from Old French pastoral (13c.), from Latin pastoralis “of herdsmen, of shepherds,” from pastor (see pastor (n.)). The noun sense of “poem dealing with country life generally” is from 1580s.

A work of art that celebrates the cultivated enjoyment of the countryside. The poem “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love,” by Christopher Marlowe, is a pastoral. Its first stanza reads:

Come live with me, and be my love;
And we will all the pleasures prove
That hills and valleys, dales and fields,
Woods or steepy mountain yields.

Read Also:

  • Pastoral-counseling

    noun 1. the use of psychotherapeutic techniques by trained members of the clergy to assist parishioners who seek help for personal or emotional problems.

  • Pastorale

    [pas-tuh-rahl, -ral, -rah-lee, pah-stuh-; Italian pahs-taw-rah-le] /ˌpæs təˈrɑl, -ˈræl, -ˈrɑ li, ˌpɑ stə-; Italian ˌpɑs tɔˈrɑ lɛ/ noun, plural pastorales, pastorali [pas-tuh-rah-lee, -ral-ee; Italian pahs-taw-rah-lee] /ˌpæs təˈrɑ li, -ˈræl i; Italian ˌpɑs tɔˈrɑ li/ (Show IPA). Music. 1. an opera, cantata, or the like, with a pastoral subject. 2. a piece of music suggestive of […]

  • Pastoral-epistles

    plural noun 1. the New Testament books of I and II Timothy and Titus that stress pastoral and ecclesiastical concerns.

  • Pastoralism

    [pas-ter-uh-liz-uh m, pah-ster-] /ˈpæs tər əˌlɪz əm, ˈpɑ stər-/ noun 1. the practice of herding as the primary economic activity of a society. n. 1854, from pastoral + -ism.

  • Pastoralist

    /ˈpɑːstərəlɪst/ noun 1. (Austral) a grazier or land-holder raising sheep, cattle, etc, on a large scale n. 1793, from pastoral + -ist.


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