francis

francis — noun

1. The name taken by Jorge Mario Bergoglio (1936–2025) when he became the leader of

1.名詞B1
釋義

The name taken by Jorge Mario Bergoglio (1936–2025) when he became the leader of the Roman Catholic Church in 2013, a position he kept until his death. He was the first pope from the Americas and the first to choose the name Francis.

例句

Many Catholics around the world respected Francis for his focus on helping the poor.

describes public perception of the pope

Francis chose to live in a simple guest house instead of the grand papal palace.

collocation: chose to [verb] + lifestyle contrast

同義詞
  • Pope Francis

    the full formal title, preferred in news headlines and official statements

  • the Pope

    a general title that could refer to any pope; context must already establish which one

  • the Holy Father

    a more formal and reverential title used mainly by Catholics

  • Bergoglio

    his family surname; used especially before 2013 or in discussions of his early life and career

文法句型

Francis / Pope Francis

用法筆記

When referring to this specific pope, 'Francis' is used without an article ('Francis said…'). 'Pope Francis' is the full formal title and is more common in official contexts. Do not confuse with 'Saint Francis of Assisi', a 13th-century saint who lived centuries earlier.

常見錯誤

Saint Francis visited Brazil in 2013.
Pope Francis visited Brazil in 2013.
💡Saint Francis (of Assisi) died in 1226; Pope Francis was the living pope who visited Brazil.