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litany
[ lit-n-ee ]
noun
- a ceremonial or liturgical form of prayer consisting of a series of invocations or supplications with responses that are the same for a number in succession.
- the Litany, the supplication in this form in the Book of Common Prayer.
- a recitation or recital that resembles a litany.
- a prolonged or tedious account:
We heard the whole litany of their complaints.
Synonyms: enumeration, catalog, list
litany
/ ˈlɪtənɪ /
noun
- Christianity
- a form of prayer consisting of a series of invocations, each followed by an unvarying response
- the general supplication in this form included in the Book of Common Prayer
- any long or tedious speech or recital
litany
- In many religions, a ritual repetition of prayers. Usually a clergyman or singer chants a prayer, and the congregation makes a response, such as “Lord, have mercy.”
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of litany1
Example Sentences
They made a litany of errors and you know that they can be a whole lot better than this.
And because the world, and one’s continued engagement with it, is a repeated litany of small erosions, it is through the practice of beauty that we learn to survive, to soar even.
Musk’s sycophantic relationship with Trump is spawning a litany of jokes across multiple media fronts.
McCartney pleaded guilty to a litany of child sex offences and the manslaughter of 12-year-old Cimarron Thomas, who took her own life minutes after an online chat with him in 2018.
However, they hung in there to the end in all five despite a litany of miscues.
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