kyrie

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A short prayer or petition including the phrase kyrie, meaning "Lord, have mercy"
: A setting of the traditional kyrie text to music for a Mass
{i} part of the phrase "Kyrie eleison" ("God have mercy on us" - from a Catholic prayer)
A setting of the traditional kyrie text to music for a Mass
From the Greek for the actual name, Kyrie Eleison, which means, "Lord have mercy " The Kyrie comes after the Ten Commandments or the summary of the law in the Rite I Eucharist, to serve as a reminder to us that we cannot, by our own effort, keep the commandments It is a plea for grace by fallen sinners In Rite II, where there is no recitation of the Ten Commandments or a summary of the law, the Kyrie seems out of place, and is, for that reason, often omitted
A short prayer or petition including the phrase kyrie or Lord, have mercy
Lord " In the Mass, the first part of the ordinary
See Kyrie eleison
The first movement of the ordinary of the Catholic mass The complete words of this movement, in Greek, are "Kyrie eleison/Christe eleison/ Kyrie eleison" ("Lord have mercy/Christ have mercy/Lord have mercy")
Kyrie eleison
(Greek) "Lord have mercy on us" (brief prayer used in the Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Anglican Churches)
kyrie eleison
used in the Mass, the breviary offices, the litany of the saints, etc
kyrie eleison
Greek words, meaning "Lord, have mercy upon us,"
kyrie eleison
Greek words, meaning "Lord, have mercy upon us," used in the Mass, the breviary offices, the litany of the saints, etc
kyrie eleison
The name given to the response to the Commandments, in the service of the Church of England and of the Protestant Episcopal Church
kyrie

    Hyphenation

    Ky·ri·e

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    () Contraction of the Ancient Greek phrase Κύριε ἐλέησον (Kyrie eleison, “Lord, have mercy”)

    Common Collocations

    kyrie eleison
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