Trinitarian
nounEtymology
From French trinitaire (from Medieval Latin trinitarius, from Latin trinitas + -arius) + -ian.
- derived from trinitas
- derived from trinitaire
Definitions
Someone who believes in the Trinity, the three persons of the Godhead.
A member of the Trinitarian order.
Believing in the Trinity.
- It was no less than whether the psychic movement in Britain was destined to take a Unitarian or a Trinitarian course.
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Of or pertaining to the Trinity (the three persons of the Godhead) or to the doctrine of…
Of or pertaining to the Trinity (the three persons of the Godhead) or to the doctrine of Trinity.
- The influence of trinitarian iconography is evident to varying degrees. Teresa and Elizabeth, for example, make reference to particular visual images of the Trinity.
Of or pertaining to a trinity, a group of three (almost exclusively when compared to the…
Of or pertaining to a trinity, a group of three (almost exclusively when compared to the Christian Trinity).
- In polytheism we find also a tendency to a trinitarian grouping of gods, and in each threefold group one god who was at least primus inter pares.
- See PL 210.54C and James J. Sheridan's stimulating observations on the Trinitarian grouping of Nature, Genius, and Truth (in his note on p. 218).
- It is in Hastings' Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics: […]
Alternative form of Trinitarian.
The neighborhood
- antonymantitrinitarian
- antonymnontrinitarian
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for Trinitarian. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA