orthodox
adjEtymology
From Late Middle English orthodoxe, from Middle French orthodoxe and its etymon Late Latin orthodoxus, from Ancient Greek ὀρθόδοξος (orthódoxos), from ὀρθός (orthós, “straight”) + δόξα (dóxa, “opinion”).
- derived from ὀρθόδοξος
- derived from orthodoxus
- derived from orthodoxe
- inherited from orthodoxe
Definitions
Conforming to the accepted, established, or traditional doctrines of a given faith,…
Conforming to the accepted, established, or traditional doctrines of a given faith, religion, or ideology.
- Five important modifications were made by the Pietists to the orthodox doctrine of justification, each corresponding to a distinctive aspect of the movement's agenda.
- ‘These speakers are academics who have specialised in Islamic sciences and are well respected in scholarly circles. It is grossly unjust to suggest that they belong to some fringe ideology rather than orthodox Islam.’
Adhering to whatever is customary, traditional, or generally accepted.
- She tattled on: first to one, then to the other—then to all, till she had tattled herself out of breath;—and then the orthodox half hour had expired, and the bell was rung, and the carriage ordered, and Mrs. Hare rose to depart.
- Not only the quack cures of the past but also many forms of treatment given with the best will and intentions in the world by the best and most orthodox doctors of the time seem strange to us today.
Of the eastern churches, Eastern Orthodox.
›+ 8 more definitionsshow fewer
Of a branch of Judaism.
Of pollen, seed, or spores
Of pollen, seed, or spores: viable for a long time; viable when dried to low moisture content.
Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Churches collectively.
Of or pertaining to a particular Orthodox Church, usually the Eastern Orthodox Church,…
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 Orthodox Judaism.
Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Quakers, a group of Quakers (subdivided into the…
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.
- [...which] Doherty hypothesized as the controlling variable for predicting who would become Orthodox or who would be Hicksite.
An Orthodox Christian.
- The Greek Orthodox population of the 62 bishoprics in 1886 numbered 65,549,096. to which the Orthodoxes of the army and navy must be added.
An Orthodox Jew.
The neighborhood
- synonymhalal
- synonymhomodox
- synonymkosher
- synonymorthodox
- synonymby the book
- synonymallowed
- synonymconventional
- synonymcustomary
- synonymnatural
- synonymofficial
- synonymproper
- synonymroutine
- antonymliberal
- antonymoutlandish
- antonymunconventional
- antonymunorthodox
- neighborEastern OrthodoxTerms related to orthodox
- neighborGreek OrthodoxTerms related to orthodox
- neighborleft arm orthodoxTerms related to orthodox
- neighborNeo-orthodoxTerms related to orthodox
- neighborOrthodoxanTerms related to orthodox
- neighbororthodox spinTerms related to orthodox
- neighbororthodox spinnerTerms related to orthodox
- neighbororthodoxyTerms related to orthodox
- neighborpaleo-orthodoxTerms related to orthodox
- neighborRussian Orthodox ChurchTerms related to orthodox
- neighborSerbian Orthodox ChurchTerms related to orthodox
- neighborexpected
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at orthodox. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at orthodox. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
6 hops · closes at orthodox
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA