A hermit (from the Greek ēremos, signifying "desert", "uninhabited", hence "desert-dweller"; adjective: "eremitic") is a person who lives to some greater or lesser degree in seclusion from society
(The English) Roger Crab He subsisted at the expense of three farthings a week, or 3s 3d per annum His food consisted of bran, herbs, roots, dock-leaves, mallows, and grass Crab died in 1680
A person who retires from society and lives in solitude; a recluse; an anchoret; especially, one who so lives from religious motives
individuals following a religious vocation which involved isolation and the practice of asceticism
A hermit is a person who lives alone, away from people and society. someone who lives alone and has a simple way of life, usually for religious reasons recluse (eremite, from eremites , from eremos ). or eremite Individual who shuns society to live in solitude, often for religious reasons. The first Christian hermits appeared in Egypt in the 3rd century AD, escaping persecution by withdrawing to the desert and leading a life of prayer and penance. The first hermit was probably Paul of Thebes AD 250. Other famous hermits included St. Anthony of Egypt, who established an early form of Christian monasticism in the 4th century, and the pillar hermit Simeon Stylites. The communal life of monasteries eventually tempered the austerities of the hermit's life. In Western Christianity the eremitic life died out, but it has persisted in Eastern Christianity
The hermit is written () It is a void value that can be returned from a function that has no useful return information or to pass to a function that has no information passed to it Value () is called the hermit because it is the only member of its species The species of () is also written () See E3
[church] From 'dweller in the wilderness' A self-imposed conditon of life, an ascetic
hermit crab başka bir hayvanın kabuğu içinde yaşayan bir çeşit yengeç
Hyphenation
her·mit crab baş·ka bir hay·va·nın ka·bu·ğu i·çin·de ya·şa·yan bir çe·şit yen·geç