Значение слова "AMISH" найдено в 14 источниках
найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• ___ in the City (UPN reality series)

• ___ Paradise

• ___ Paradise (Weird Al Yankovic Coolio parody)

• 'Witness' people

• 'Witness' sect

• Ammann followers

• Anabaptist group

• Anabaptist sect

• Automobile-eschewing sect

• Barn-raising sect

• Bearded brethren

• Bearded buggy brethren

• Buggy drivers

• Buggy people?

• Buggy-driving sect

• Button eschewers

• Drivers of some slow-moving vehicles

• Electricity eschewers

• Electricity-eschewing sect

• Electricity-shunning sect

• Folk off the grid

• Folks featured in Harrison Ford's Witness

• Followers of Jakob Ammann

• Followers of the Ordnung

• Give me the simple life advocate

• Group featured in Witness

• Group in Lancaster County, Pa.

• Group in Witness

• Group that doesn't allow instruments to be played in public

• Group that raises the roof?

• Hex-sign group

• Horse-and-buggy folks

• Horse-and-buggy group

• Horse-and-buggy riders of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania

• Horse-and-buggy sect

• Jakob Ammann's followers

• Kingsley, hot for folk in Pennsylvania (5)

• Lancaster County group

• Lancaster group

• Lancaster sect

• Lancaster-area group

• Lancaster-area sect

• Like many buggy riders

• Like many from Lancaster

• Like many Lancasterites

• Like some buggy drivers

• Like some horse-and-buggy riders

• Like some Pennsylvanians

• Like the witness in Witness

• Like Weird Al Yankovic's paradise

• Low-powered group?

• Low-tech group

• Many Pennsylvanians

• Mennonite

• Mennonite follower

• Mennonite group

• Mennonite sect

• Mennonite sect members

• Modern-day horse-and-buggy travelers

• Noted churners

• Off-the-grid sect

• Old Order ___ (simple-living sect)

• Old-fashioned folk

• Old-fashioned sort

• Onetime Mennonite sect

• Orthodox sect

• Pacifist Pennsylvanians

• Peaceful people

• Pennsylvania Anabaptists

• Pennsylvania country

• Pennsylvania Dutch

• Pennsylvania Dutch group

• Pennsylvania folk

• Pennsylvania religious sect

• Pennsylvania sect

• People in the 2001 novel Plain Truth

• People of Pennsylvania

• People whose best-known technology is buggy?

• People whose hymns are almost always monophonic

• People without power, often

• Pious Pennsylvania people

• Plain dressers

• Plain folk

• Plain Pennsylvanians

• Plain People

• Plain sect

• Plain-living group

• Plain-living people

• Plain-living sect

• Primarily powerless people of Pennsylvania

• Protestant group

• Quilt makers of Lancaster County, Pa.

• Quilt-making folk

• Rejecters of modern technology

• Rumspringa followers

• Rumspringa group

• Sect in Pa.

• Sect in Witness

• Sect portrayed in Witness

• Sect that settled in Pennsylvania

• Sect with horse-and-buggy riders

• Shoofly pie bakers

• Simple folk

• Simple people

• Simple-living sect

• Some bearded men

• Some buggy drivers

• Some buggy users

• Some horse-and-buggy riders

• Some Mennonites

• Some of the Pennsylvania Dutch

• Some Pennsylvania Dutch

• Some Pennsylvania people

• Some Plain People

• Some quilt makers

• Some Specter constituents

• Strict community

• Technology-shunning group

• The Mennonites

• The Plain People

• Travelers in horse buggies

• Wagon drivers

• Weird Al Yankovic's ___ Paradise

• Wide-brimmed hat wearers

• Witness cast

• Witness extras

• Witness folk

• Witness group

• Witness witnesses

• Word that replaced Gangsta's in a noted 1996 parody song title

• An American follower of the Mennonite Bishop Amman


найдено в "Encyclopedia of Protestantism"
Amish: translation

   The Amish are an Anabaptist group that has become well known for its efforts to maintain its separatist agricultural life in small enclaves in the United states, resisting involvement with the state and, more recently, with modern technology.
   The Amish trace their history to Jacob Amman (b. c. 1644), a Swiss Mennonite leader who called for a strict interpretation of the writings of Menno Simons (the founder of the Mennonites) and of the Dordrecht Confession of Faith (1632), a widely acknowledged statement of belief for Men-nonites. The Dordrecht text includes an important paragraph on banning (disfellowshipping) and shunning. As members are expected not to eat, drink, or even converse on nonreligious matters with a banned person, shunning can have severe consequences, even in relations between spouses.
   Amman's strict interpretation of church discipline eventually led him to place all who disagreed with him under the ban.The harsh feelings so generated resulted in separation between the Amish and other Mennonites, and the schism was never healed. Over time, as Mennonites accommodated in many ways to changes in modern life, other issues intruded to keep the two groups apart.
   The Amish have attempted to keep the common clothing of the 17th century, as a sign of the life of humility and separation from the world they espouse. Their garb is further distinctive in having no buttons, a fashion adopted out of the memory of the large buttons decorating the uniforms of soldiers that killed many Anabaptists. After marriage, men grow beards (for which there are many biblical precedents) but not mustaches, which are also associated with the military. Women wear bonnets and aprons.
   After more than a century of persecution in Europe, the Amish migrated to America in the 18th century and largely disappeared from their homeland. They established themselves in Pennsylvania, and as their fellowship grew, expanded to Ohio and Illinois. Being close to major urban areas has made them objects of curiosity, and they have increasingly moved to more isolated regions of North America and, most recently, Central America.
   There are an estimated 150,000 Amish, of which approximately half are members of the Old Order Mennonite Church. Amish organization is congregationally based, and there are no central headquarters for the various groups. Splits have occurred over accommodations made by some Amish (such as allowing members who work away from their farms to use automobiles). They also periodically find themselves in court in attempts to maintain customs that conflict with local laws.
   Old Order Amish worship in the homes of the members, with each family hosting the congregation on a rotating basis. The construction of church buildings by some smaller groups has been a source of schism. The Mennonite Information Center, 2209 Millstream Road, Lancaster, PA 17602, has assumed part of the task of interpreting Amish life to the many tourists who visit Lancaster County.
   Further reading:
   ■ A. Martha Denlinger, Real People: Amish and Mennonites in Lancaster, Pennsylvania (Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 2000)
   ■ John A. Hoestetler, Amish Society (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1968, 1993)
   ■ Donald B. Kraybill and Carl E Bowman. On the Backroad to Heaven: Old Order Hutterites, Mennonites, Amish, and Brethren (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001)
   ■ William R. McGrath, Why We Wear Plain Clothes (Cattolton, Ohio: Amish Mennonite Publication, 1980).


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
1. [ʹæmıʃ,ʹɑ:mıʃ] n употр. с гл. во мн. ч. рел.
аманиты; секта американских менонитов; последователи епископа Аммана (XVII в.)
2. [ʹæmıʃ,ʹɑ:mıʃ] a
аманитский, относящийся к американским менонитам (XVII в.)


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре под общим руководством акад. Ю.Д. Апресяна"


1. {ʹæmıʃ,ʹɑ:mıʃ} n употр. с гл. во мн. ч. рел.

аманиты; секта американских менонитов; последователи епископа Аммана (XVII в.)

2. {ʹæmıʃ,ʹɑ:mıʃ} a

аманитский, относящийся к американским менонитам (XVII в.)



найдено в "Англо-русском словаре по социологии"
n
аманиты; американская протестантская секта, проповедующая изоляционистское развитие, выступающая за запрет на участие в военных действиях.
* * *
сущ.
аманиты; американская протестантская секта, проповедующая изоляционистское развитие, выступающая за запрет на участие в военных действиях.


найдено в "Universal-Lexicon"
Amish: übersetzung

Amish ['a:mɪʃ] <Pl.> [nach Jakob Amman]:
engl. Form von »Amischen« (Amischer 2):
die A.


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
Amish
1. [ʹæmıʃ,ʹɑ:mıʃ] n употр. с гл. во мн. ч. рел. аманиты; секта американских менонитов; последователи епископа Аммана (XVII в.)
2. [ʹæmıʃ,ʹɑ:mıʃ] a аманитский, относящийся к американским менонитам (XVII в.)



найдено в "Англо-русском словаре общей лексики"
прил. рел. амский (об обычаях и пр. одной из разновидностей секты меннонитов, основанной швейцарским меннонитом-радикалом Якобом Амманом)
найдено в "Deutsch namen"
Amish: übersetzung

indischer Name, Bedeutung: der Ehrliche, Redliche.


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Лингвистика-98"
(n) аманиты; последователи епископа аммана; секта американских менонитов
найдено в "Англо-русском словаре редакции bed"
n. Амиш, строгая протестантская секта в Америке
найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Лингвистика-98"
(r) относящийся к американским менонитам
найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Лингвистика-98"
(a) аманитский
T: 260