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Page "Religious ecstasy" ¶ 1
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Some Related Sentences

adjective and religious
The Western religious philosophy called Theosophy has popularized the word Akasha as an adjective, through the use of the term " Akashic records " or " Akashic library ", referring to an ethereal compendium of all knowledge and history.
The adjective Most Reverend was intended to distinguish the religious title from that of Excellency given to civil officials.
Duenos has given classic Latin bonus, good, but originally the adjective had certainly religious and sacral implications: in the oldest sacral formulae it had a more technical acception and the repetition had other implications than just eurhythmy.
Since Dandin ( literally, a staff-bearer ) is also a common adjective for ascetics or religious mendicants,
Jesuitism is a label given to particular casuistic approach to moral questions and problems often described by the adjective jesuitical, so called because it was promoted by some Jesuits of the 17th century rather than being the beliefs of the Society of Jesus as a religious order.
Curiously, potentially offensive words were also included as surnames, including Gajasa ( gahasa ; rape, originally means " someone who rushed "), Bayot ( Cebuano: effeminate, an adjective used by Spanish priests against native male religious leader Babaylan ), Bacla ( bakla ; effeminate ; male crossdresser ), Otot ( utot ; flatulence ), Tanga ( stupid ; daydreamer " anga-anga ", Chinese ti-ang / ti-ng / to-ng ), Limotin ( limutin ; forgetful / to forget ), Lubut ( Cebuano: buttocks ; Tagalog: Kulubut ), Tae ( excrement ), Ongoy ( unggoy ; monkey ), Aso ( dog, Chinese: A-So ), Jalimao ( halimaw ; monster ) and Yyac ( iiyak ; will cry ).

adjective and means
As an adjective, the word Afghan also means " of or relating to Afghanistan or its people, language, or culture ".
This term derived from the Greek adjective ( ataraktos ) which means " not disturbed, not excited, without confusion, steady, calm ".
In Greek, the adjective kyriak-ós /- ē /- ón means " belonging, or pertaining, to a Kýrios " (" Lord "), and the usage was adopted by early Christians of the Eastern Mediterranean with regard to anything pertaining to the Lord Jesus Christ: hence " Kyriakós oíkos " (" house of the Lord ", church ), " Kyriakē " (" day of the Lord ", i. e. Sunday ), or " Kyriakē proseukhē " ( the " Lord's prayer ").
The word maritime is an adjective that simply means " of the sea ", thus any land associated with the sea can be considered a maritime state or province ( e. g. All the provinces of Canada except Alberta and Saskatchewan border water ).
The adjective francophone means French-speaking, typically as primary language, whether referring to individuals, groups, or places.
Like in German, the adjective rijk means " rich ".
In 1931 the Merriam-Webster dictionary adopted the word " Rube Goldberg " as an adjective defined as accomplishing something simple through complex means.
The adjective cutaneous means " of the skin " ( from Latin cutis, skin ).
The adjective submarine, in terms such as submarine cable, means " under the sea ".
Also, together with the adjective ağır, which means " heavy " or " slow " in Turkish, Roman is the designation for a special kind of street music, played by some of the novel's protagonists.
The adjective surgical means pertaining to surgery ; e. g. surgical instruments or surgical nurse.
The adjective Tridentine ( as in " Tridentine Mass ") literally means pertaining to Trento, but can also refer to that specific event.
Thus, closet as an adjective means secret — usually with a connotation of vice or shame, as in " a closet alcoholic " or " a closet homosexual ," though sometimes used as a humorous exaggeration for any potential embarrassment, as in " a closet comic book fan.
The word piety comes from the Latin word pietas, the noun form of the adjective pius ( which means " devout " or " good ").
Note that, however, in Quebec, déjeuner alone ( without the qualifying adjective petit ) means " breakfast ".
Saraṇyū means " swift " and is derived from the adjective saraṇa (" running ", " swift "), the feminine of which is saraṇā ; this is in every sound cognate with, the form of her name that has no initial digamma.
The adjective " ascetic " derives from the ancient Greek term askēsis, which means training or exercise.
The adjective " mephitic " means " foul-smelling " or " malodorous ".
Jejunum is derived from the adjective jejune, which means " fasting " or " hungry " in Early Modern English.
" Damned " is also used as an adjective synonymous with " annoying " or " uncooperative ," or as a means of giving emphasis.
As an adjective it means " brown ", but as a noun the meaning changes to " chief " ( prince, lord ).
Hence, when used as an adjective, " infinitesimal " in the vernacular means " extremely small ".
As an adjective, " okay " means " adequate ," " acceptable " (" this is okay to send out "), " mediocre " often in contrast to " good " (" the food was okay "); it also functions as an adverb in this sense.
As an adjective, it means ' heavy ,' or ' weighty ,' in the sense of " heavy with knowledge ," heavy with spiritual wisdom, " heavy with spiritual weight ," " heavy with the good qualities of scriptures and realization ," or " heavy with a wealth of knowledge.
translation " Fragments by an Unknown Author " is misleading ; the German adjective " ungenannt " means " anonymous ".

adjective and experience
Multimedia ( as an adjective ) also describes electronic media devices used to store and experience multimedia content.
A similar adjective is gender-normative ; Eli R. Green wrote, " The term ' cisgendered ' is used of the more popular ' gender normative ' to refer to people who do not identify with a gender diverse experience, without enforcing existence of a ' normative ' gender expression.
Viewers flocked to pay a stiff 3 shillings to stand on a central platform under a skylight, which offered an even lighting, and get an experience that was " panoramic " ( an adjective that didn't appear in print until 1813 ).
Because it restricts the meaning of " vegetable ", this adjective clause is called a restrictive clause ; it is essential to the meaning of the main clause and uses no commas ( and correspondingly, does not experience a pause when spoken ).
But in psychophysics and experimental psychology the adjective " apparent " refers to a person's subjective experience.
" Strange ," Data says, " is not a sufficient adjective to describe the experience.

adjective and occurs
The article la, like the demonstrative adjective tiu ( this, that ), nearly always occurs at the beginning of the noun phrase, but this is not required by the grammar, and exceptions occur in poetry.
is the devi feminine of an adjective ( which occurs in the Rigveda as the name of the keeper of the celestial waters ), derived from Proto-Indo-Iranian * ( and earlier, PIE ), meaning ‘ marshy, full of pools ’.
When used attributively within a noun phrase, complex adjectival phrases tend to occur after the noun: I found a typist much quicker than I ( compare I found a quick typist, where a simple adjective occurs before the noun ).
The noun sometimes occurs in abbreviated slang form as " perv " and used as a verb meaning " to act like a pervert ", and the adjective " pervy " also occurs.
Code-switching mostly occurs where the syntaxes of the languages align in a sentence ; thus, it is uncommon to switch from English to French after an adjective and before a noun, because, in French, adjectives usually follow nouns.
The term belial ( בליעל bĕli-yaal ) is a Hebrew adjective meaning " worthless " from two common words beli-( ב ְּ ל ִ י " without -") and ya ' al ( י ָ ע ַ ל " value ") It occurs twenty-seven times in the Masoretic Text in verses such as the following:
Sometimes when elohim occurs as the referent or object ( i. e. not subject ) of a sentence, and without any accompanying verb or adjective to indicate plurality, it may be grammatically unclear whether gods plural or God singular is intended.
Example: Danish vis can signify both the adjective pronounced ( wise ) and the adjective pronounced ( certain ), even though the plural forms of the adjectives, where the consonant occurs medially, are distinguished in writing by means of a double s in the second word ( vise vs visse ).
The Hebrew term kaneh ( ק ָ נ ֶ ה ) is the standard Hebrew word for " cane " or " reed ," occurring 62 times in the Masoretic text of the Hebrew Bible It usually occurs without the adjective " sweet ," and is translated " reed ," though twice as calamus ( Song of Songs 4: 14 and Ezekiel 27: 19 KJV ).
It occurs with the adjective " sweet " in three places ( Exodus 30: 22-33, Isaiah 43: 24, Jeremiah 6: 20 ), where kaneh bosm is typically translated as " calamus ," " sweet cane " or " fragrant cane " in English versions.

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