English-Wörter für 'One who Christianizes.'
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Suchergebnisse
- a Christian
- a person who is not a member of one's own religion; used in this sense by Mormons and Hindus
- a Christian as contrasted with a Jew
- a person who does not acknowledge your god
- (Mormonism) A non-Mormon person.
- (Judaism) A non-Jewish person.
- (grammar) A noun derived from a proper noun which denotes something belonging to or coming from a particular city, nation, or country.
- belonging to or characteristic of non-Jewish peoples
- Heathen, pagan.
- Of or pertaining to a gens or several gentes.
- (grammar) Of a part of speech such as an adjective, noun or verb: relating to a particular city, nation or country.
- Relating to a clan, tribe, or nation; clannish, tribal, national.
- Non-Jewish.
- (Mormonism) Non-Mormon.
- A believer in Christianity.
- a religious person who believes Jesus is the Christ and who is a member of a Christian denomination
- A person who seeks to live his or her life according to the principles and values taught by Jesus Christ.
- (nonstandard) An adherent of Christianity who is not a Catholic; a Protestant.
- (Christianity) A Christian; a faithful believer in the present world.
- (Christianity) One of the blessed in heaven.
- (figuratively, by extension) A person with similarly overwhelming positive qualities; one who does good.
- (Mormonism, specifically) Alternative letter-case form of Saint (“a Mormon, a Latter-day Saint”).
- (religion, generally) A deceased person whom a church or another religious group has officially recognised as especially holy or godly; one eminent for piety and virtue.
- model of excellence or perfection of a kind; one having no equal
- a person of exceptional holiness
- a person who has died and has been declared a saint by canonization
- (Christianity) A person adhering to Roman Catholic practice.
- A person from Latin America.
- (historical) A person native to ancient Rome or its Empire.
- (historical) A member of an Italic tribe that included the early inhabitants of the city of Rome, and from about 1000 BC inhabited the region known as Old Latium.
- A person from one of the modern European countries (including Italy, Spain etc.) whose language is descended from Latin.
- any dialect of the language of ancient Rome
- an inhabitant of ancient Latium
- a person who is a member of those peoples whose languages derived from Latin
- Of or from Latin America or of Latin American culture.
- Of or relating to Latin: the language spoken in ancient Rome and other cities of Latium.
- (Christianity) Roman Catholic; of or pertaining to the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church.
- Of or relating to ancient Rome or its Empire.
- Of or relating to Latium (modern Lazio), the region around Rome.
- Of or relating to the customs and people descended from the ancient Romans and their Empire.
- Of or relating to the script of the language spoken in ancient Rome and many modern alphabets.
- of or relating to the ancient Latins or the Latin language
- of or relating to the ancient region of Latium
- relating to languages derived from Latin
- relating to people or countries speaking Romance languages
- (derogatory) A fundamentalist Christian.
- One who reduces religion to strict interpretation of core or original texts.
- (Christianity) Originally referred to an adherent of an American Christian movement that began as a response to the rejection of the accuracy of the Bible, the alleged deity of Christ, Christ's atonement for humanity, the virgin birth, and miracles.
- (finance) A trader who trades on the financial fundamentals of the companies involved, as opposed to a chartist or technician.
- an adherent of fundamentalist principles
- a supporter of fundamentalism
- (Christianity) Protestant; specifically Lutheran and Calvinist churches in continental Europe as well as their offshoots in North America.
- Zealously enthusiastic.
- (Islam) Pertaining to Islamic groups that are dedicated to dawah and preaching the Quran and sunnah.
- (Christianity) Pertaining to the gospel(s) of the Christian New Testament.
- (Christianity) Pertaining to the doctrines or teachings of the Christian gospel or Christianity in general.
- (Christianity) Pertaining to a movement in Protestant Christianity that stresses personal conversion and the authority of the Bible (evangelicalism).
- of or pertaining to or in keeping with the Christian gospel especially as in the first 4 books of the New Testament
- marked by ardent or zealous enthusiasm for a cause
- relating to or being a Christian church believing in personal conversion and the inerrancy of the Bible especially the 4 Gospels
- (Quakerism) Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Quakers, a group of Quakers (subdivided into the Wilburite, Gurneyite and Beaconite branches) who split with the Hicksite Quakers due to favoring adopting mainstream Protestant orthodoxy.
- (Christianity) Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Churches collectively.
- (Judaism) Of or pertaining to Orthodox Judaism.
- (Christianity, loosely) Of or pertaining to a particular Orthodox Church, usually the Eastern Orthodox Church, sometimes the Oriental Orthodox Church or the Church of the East.
- of or pertaining to or characteristic of Judaism
- of or relating to or characteristic of the Eastern Orthodox Church
- one who subscribes to a particular theological doctrine or religious denomination;
- one who engages in a particular type of activity;
- one who suffers from a specific condition or syndrome
- one who owns or manages something;
- a person who studies or practices a particular discipline;
- a person who speaks or specializes in a (usually constructed) language.
- one who has a certain ideology or set of beliefs;
- a person who uses a device of some kind;
- a person who holds bigoted, partial views with respect to a particular matter.
- A member of a particular Protestant religious sect advocating greater purity and piety.
- a member of a group of English Protestants who in the 16th and 17th centuries thought that the Protestant Reformation under Elizabeth was incomplete and advocated the simplification and regulation of forms of worship
- (figurative) To Christianize.
- (slang) To extinguish the life of.
- To dedicate or christen.
- (Christianity) To perform the sacrament of baptism by sprinkling or pouring water over someone or immersing them in water.
- (slang) To ensure proper burning of a joint by moistening the exterior with saliva.
- administer baptism to
- One who confesses faith in Christianity in the face of persecution, but who is not martyred.
- One who confesses to having done something wrong.
- (Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism) A priest who hears confession and then gives absolution.
- (by extension, figurative) Someone who acts as listener and helper.
- someone who confesses (discloses information damaging to themselves)
- a priest who hears confession and gives absolution
- A person who has converted to a religion.
- Anyone who has converted from being one thing to being another.
- (Canadian football) The equivalent of a conversion in rugby
- A person who is now in favour of something that they previously opposed or disliked.
- a person who has been converted to another religious or political belief
- (transitive, cricket) To increase one's individual score, especially from 50 runs (a fifty) to 100 runs (a century), or from a century to a double or triple century.
- (transitive) To transform or change (something) into another form, substance, state, or product.
- (transitive) To induce (someone) to adopt a particular religion, faith, ideology or belief (see also sense 12).
- (transitive) To express (a quantity) in alternative units.
- (transitive, logic) To change (one proposition) into another, so that what was the subject of the first becomes the predicate of the second.
- (intransitive, ten-pin bowling) To score a spare.
- (ambitransitive, rugby football) To score extra points after (a try) by completing a conversion.
- (intransitive) To undergo a conversion of religion, faith or belief (see also sense 3).
- (transitive) To exchange for something of equal value.
- (transitive or intransitive, soccer) To score (especially a penalty kick).
- (intransitive) To become converted.
- (intransitive, marketing) To perform the action that an online advertisement is intended to induce; to reach the point of conversion.
- (ambitransitive, chess) To transform a material or positional advantage into a win.
- (transitive, law) To appropriate wrongfully or unlawfully; to commit the common law tort of conversion.
- (transitive) To express (a unit of measurement) in terms of another; to furnish a mathematical formula by which a quantity, expressed in the former unit, may be given in the latter.
- (transitive) To change (something) from one use, function, or purpose to another.
- (American football) To score extra points following a touchdown.
- cause to adopt a new or different faith
- change the nature, purpose, or function of something
- change in nature, purpose, or function; undergo a chemical change
- change from one system to another or to a new plan or policy
- change religious beliefs, or adopt a religious belief
- exchange or replace with another, usually of the same kind or category
- exchange a penalty for a less severe one
- score an extra point or points after touchdown by kicking the ball through the uprights or advancing the ball into the end zone
- make (someone) agree, understand, or realize the truth or validity of something
- an adherent of Protestantism
- the Protestant churches and denominations collectively
- (Christianity) A member of any of several Christian denominations which separated from the Roman Catholic Church based on theological or political differences during the Reformation (or in some cases later).
- (historical) A member of the Church of England or Church of Ireland, as distinct from Protestant nonconformists or dissenters.
- (historical, religion) One of a variety of persons or entities in western Manichaeism, of whom some correspond closely to the Christian conception of Jesus of Nazareth.
- Jesus of Nazareth, a first-century Jewish religious preacher and craftsman (commonly understood to have been a carpenter) from Galilee held to be a prophet, teacher, the Son of God, and the Messiah, or Christ, in Christianity; also called "Jesus Christ" by Christians. Held to be a prophet by Muslims and Baháʼís. Also called "the historical Jesus" from a historiographic viewpoint or a secular one.
- A male given name from Aramaic.
- (Oxford University, informal) Ellipsis of Jesus College, Oxford.
- A male given name from Spanish in Spanish culture; an anglicized spelling of Jesús.
- (Cambridge University, informal) Ellipsis of Jesus College, Cambridge.
- Loosely, a Christian who does not conform to the doctrines of an established church.
- Someone who does not conform to accepted beliefs, customs or practices.
- A noctuid moth (Lithophane lamda).
- A member of a church separated from the Church of England; a Protestant dissenter.
- someone who refuses to conform to established standards of conduct
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- a Christian
- a person who is not a member of one's own religion; used in this sense by Mormons and Hindus
- a Christian as contrasted with a Jew
- a person who does not acknowledge your god
- (Mormonism) A non-Mormon person.
- (Judaism) A non-Jewish person.
- (grammar) A noun derived from a proper noun which denotes something belonging to or coming from a particular city, nation, or country.
- belonging to or characteristic of non-Jewish peoples
- Heathen, pagan.
- Of or pertaining to a gens or several gentes.
- (grammar) Of a part of speech such as an adjective, noun or verb: relating to a particular city, nation or country.
- Relating to a clan, tribe, or nation; clannish, tribal, national.
- Non-Jewish.
- (Mormonism) Non-Mormon.
- A believer in Christianity.
- a religious person who believes Jesus is the Christ and who is a member of a Christian denomination
- A person who seeks to live his or her life according to the principles and values taught by Jesus Christ.
- (nonstandard) An adherent of Christianity who is not a Catholic; a Protestant.
- (Christianity) A Christian; a faithful believer in the present world.
- (Christianity) One of the blessed in heaven.
- (figuratively, by extension) A person with similarly overwhelming positive qualities; one who does good.
- (Mormonism, specifically) Alternative letter-case form of Saint (“a Mormon, a Latter-day Saint”).
- (religion, generally) A deceased person whom a church or another religious group has officially recognised as especially holy or godly; one eminent for piety and virtue.
- model of excellence or perfection of a kind; one having no equal
- a person of exceptional holiness
- a person who has died and has been declared a saint by canonization
- (Christianity) A person adhering to Roman Catholic practice.
- A person from Latin America.
- (historical) A person native to ancient Rome or its Empire.
- (historical) A member of an Italic tribe that included the early inhabitants of the city of Rome, and from about 1000 BC inhabited the region known as Old Latium.
- A person from one of the modern European countries (including Italy, Spain etc.) whose language is descended from Latin.
- any dialect of the language of ancient Rome
- an inhabitant of ancient Latium
- a person who is a member of those peoples whose languages derived from Latin
- Of or from Latin America or of Latin American culture.
- Of or relating to Latin: the language spoken in ancient Rome and other cities of Latium.
- (Christianity) Roman Catholic; of or pertaining to the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church.
- Of or relating to ancient Rome or its Empire.
- Of or relating to Latium (modern Lazio), the region around Rome.
- Of or relating to the customs and people descended from the ancient Romans and their Empire.
- Of or relating to the script of the language spoken in ancient Rome and many modern alphabets.
- of or relating to the ancient Latins or the Latin language
- of or relating to the ancient region of Latium
- relating to languages derived from Latin
- relating to people or countries speaking Romance languages
- (derogatory) A fundamentalist Christian.
- One who reduces religion to strict interpretation of core or original texts.
- (Christianity) Originally referred to an adherent of an American Christian movement that began as a response to the rejection of the accuracy of the Bible, the alleged deity of Christ, Christ's atonement for humanity, the virgin birth, and miracles.
- (finance) A trader who trades on the financial fundamentals of the companies involved, as opposed to a chartist or technician.
- an adherent of fundamentalist principles
- a supporter of fundamentalism
- (Christianity) Protestant; specifically Lutheran and Calvinist churches in continental Europe as well as their offshoots in North America.
- Zealously enthusiastic.
- (Islam) Pertaining to Islamic groups that are dedicated to dawah and preaching the Quran and sunnah.
- (Christianity) Pertaining to the gospel(s) of the Christian New Testament.
- (Christianity) Pertaining to the doctrines or teachings of the Christian gospel or Christianity in general.
- (Christianity) Pertaining to a movement in Protestant Christianity that stresses personal conversion and the authority of the Bible (evangelicalism).
- of or pertaining to or in keeping with the Christian gospel especially as in the first 4 books of the New Testament
- marked by ardent or zealous enthusiasm for a cause
- relating to or being a Christian church believing in personal conversion and the inerrancy of the Bible especially the 4 Gospels
- (Quakerism) Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Quakers, a group of Quakers (subdivided into the Wilburite, Gurneyite and Beaconite branches) who split with the Hicksite Quakers due to favoring adopting mainstream Protestant orthodoxy.
- (Christianity) Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Churches collectively.
- (Judaism) Of or pertaining to Orthodox Judaism.
- (Christianity, loosely) Of or pertaining to a particular Orthodox Church, usually the Eastern Orthodox Church, sometimes the Oriental Orthodox Church or the Church of the East.
- of or pertaining to or characteristic of Judaism
- of or relating to or characteristic of the Eastern Orthodox Church
- A member of a particular Protestant religious sect advocating greater purity and piety.
- a member of a group of English Protestants who in the 16th and 17th centuries thought that the Protestant Reformation under Elizabeth was incomplete and advocated the simplification and regulation of forms of worship
- One who confesses faith in Christianity in the face of persecution, but who is not martyred.
- One who confesses to having done something wrong.
- (Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism) A priest who hears confession and then gives absolution.
- (by extension, figurative) Someone who acts as listener and helper.
- someone who confesses (discloses information damaging to themselves)
- a priest who hears confession and gives absolution
- A person who has converted to a religion.
- Anyone who has converted from being one thing to being another.
- (Canadian football) The equivalent of a conversion in rugby
- A person who is now in favour of something that they previously opposed or disliked.
- a person who has been converted to another religious or political belief
- (transitive, cricket) To increase one's individual score, especially from 50 runs (a fifty) to 100 runs (a century), or from a century to a double or triple century.
- (transitive) To transform or change (something) into another form, substance, state, or product.
- (transitive) To induce (someone) to adopt a particular religion, faith, ideology or belief (see also sense 12).
- (transitive) To express (a quantity) in alternative units.
- (transitive, logic) To change (one proposition) into another, so that what was the subject of the first becomes the predicate of the second.
- (intransitive, ten-pin bowling) To score a spare.
- (ambitransitive, rugby football) To score extra points after (a try) by completing a conversion.
- (intransitive) To undergo a conversion of religion, faith or belief (see also sense 3).
- (transitive) To exchange for something of equal value.
- (transitive or intransitive, soccer) To score (especially a penalty kick).
- (intransitive) To become converted.
- (intransitive, marketing) To perform the action that an online advertisement is intended to induce; to reach the point of conversion.
- (ambitransitive, chess) To transform a material or positional advantage into a win.
- (transitive, law) To appropriate wrongfully or unlawfully; to commit the common law tort of conversion.
- (transitive) To express (a unit of measurement) in terms of another; to furnish a mathematical formula by which a quantity, expressed in the former unit, may be given in the latter.
- (transitive) To change (something) from one use, function, or purpose to another.
- (American football) To score extra points following a touchdown.
- cause to adopt a new or different faith
- change the nature, purpose, or function of something
- change in nature, purpose, or function; undergo a chemical change
- change from one system to another or to a new plan or policy
- change religious beliefs, or adopt a religious belief
- exchange or replace with another, usually of the same kind or category
- exchange a penalty for a less severe one
- score an extra point or points after touchdown by kicking the ball through the uprights or advancing the ball into the end zone
- make (someone) agree, understand, or realize the truth or validity of something
- an adherent of Protestantism
- the Protestant churches and denominations collectively
- (Christianity) A member of any of several Christian denominations which separated from the Roman Catholic Church based on theological or political differences during the Reformation (or in some cases later).
- (historical) A member of the Church of England or Church of Ireland, as distinct from Protestant nonconformists or dissenters.
- (historical, religion) One of a variety of persons or entities in western Manichaeism, of whom some correspond closely to the Christian conception of Jesus of Nazareth.
- Jesus of Nazareth, a first-century Jewish religious preacher and craftsman (commonly understood to have been a carpenter) from Galilee held to be a prophet, teacher, the Son of God, and the Messiah, or Christ, in Christianity; also called "Jesus Christ" by Christians. Held to be a prophet by Muslims and Baháʼís. Also called "the historical Jesus" from a historiographic viewpoint or a secular one.
- A male given name from Aramaic.
- (Oxford University, informal) Ellipsis of Jesus College, Oxford.
- A male given name from Spanish in Spanish culture; an anglicized spelling of Jesús.
- (Cambridge University, informal) Ellipsis of Jesus College, Cambridge.
- Loosely, a Christian who does not conform to the doctrines of an established church.
- Someone who does not conform to accepted beliefs, customs or practices.
- A noctuid moth (Lithophane lamda).
- A member of a church separated from the Church of England; a Protestant dissenter.
- someone who refuses to conform to established standards of conduct
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- (figurative) To Christianize.
- (slang) To extinguish the life of.
- To dedicate or christen.
- (Christianity) To perform the sacrament of baptism by sprinkling or pouring water over someone or immersing them in water.
- (slang) To ensure proper burning of a joint by moistening the exterior with saliva.
- administer baptism to