gentile

suomi-englanti sanakirja

gentile englannista suomeksi

  1. ei-juutalainen

  2. harhauskoinen

  3. vääräuskoinen

  1. ei-juutalainen

  2. Substantiivi

gentile englanniksi

  1. Non-Jewish.

  2. (syn)

  3. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed by M. J. for Robert Knaplock(nb...), R. and J. Bonwicke(nb...), and H. Clements(nb...)|year=1711|pages=lxxiv–lxxv|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=s0QIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PR75|oclc=642296075|passage=This ſhall bring down the ''Judgment'' upon ''Rome'', preſently after the Appearance of ''Antichriſt'': and as upon ''Rome'', ſo alſo upon all the Gentile Chriſtians, who have ''a Name to live but are dead'', being fallen away from their ''Firſt Love'' and ''Faith'', and ſo having made themſelves Veſſels fit for Deſtruction, when this ſore Judgment ſhall go forth.

  4. (quote-book)|year=1847|pages=11–12|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=rjZkAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA11|oclc=629918822|passage=If we read the epistles|Epistles of the Apostle|St. Paul, we shall soon discover what efforts the Jewish converts made to bring the Gentile converts into the observance of every Jewish custom compatible with christianity:(si) and as we do not discover in those Epistles any traces of a dispute on this head between the Jewish and Gentile converts, we may fairly conclude that the Gentile converts adopted without hesitation the time-honoured manner of praising the true God made use of by the Jewish converts, instead of the Pagan mode of singing, which was then associated in their minds with every thing unclean and abominable.

  5. (quote-book) or himself, but rather good Jewish coins. It is noteworthy that he built numerous pagan buildings, including temples honouring Augustus and an amphitheater for Greek games, and he donated gymnasia to territories that he did not govern: (..) But (and this is a very big "but") he put none of these Gentile/pagan buildings in the Jewish parts of his domain.

  6. Heathen, pagan.

  7. (quote-book)&93;, argued that druids, bards and other ‘gentile’ (pagan) priests had preserved from Noah’s time the memory of a true religion that believed ‘that there is one God, immortal and incomprehensible’ (‘''unum esse Deum immortalem, et incomprehensibilem ...''’).

  8. Non-Mormon.

  9. Relating to a clan, tribe, or nation; clannish, tribal, national.

  10. (quote-book)

  11. Of or pertaining to a gens or several gentes.

  12. (quote-book) As the council sprang from the gentile organization the two institutions have come down together through the ages. The Council of Chiefs represents the ancient method of evolving the wisdom of mankind and applying it to human affairs. Its history, gentile, tribal, and confederate, would express the growth of the idea of government in its whole development, until political society supervened into which the council, changed into a senate, was transmitted.

  13. (quote-book) Morgan called this gens or clan stage, perhaps confusingly, the stage of ''gentile society''. His discovery that this form of what we would now call "unilineal descent" characterized not only the whole of North and South America, but also the original societies of Greece and Rome, was a stupendous revelation about the universal history of mankind. He knew little of Africa and Asia, but they would have supported his observation, the gentile organization—the clans—lasting in China, for example, until modern times.

  14. Of a of speech such as an adjective, noun or verb: relating to a particular city, nation or country.

  15. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Published, for the author, by Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy|year=1825|page=115|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=FFNKAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA115|oclc=681534240|passage=Gentile verbs are so denominated because derived from gentile nouns, or from proper nouns, or adnouns: they relate to countries, and to places generally, or to men: the following are examples: ''Greecise'', ''Latinise'', ''Anglicise'', (..) ''Aristotelise'', ''Sophoclise'', ''Shakesperianise''. Gentile verbs in their radical form terminate in ''ise'', with some few exceptions in ''fy'', ''ate'', and in their past participle with ''ised'', being all of the first conjugation: they are formed by annexing ''ise'' to a gentile noun or to a proper substantive or to a proper adjective.

  16. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=John Russell Smith,(nb...)|year=1854|page=71|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=_cc4AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA71|oclc=2612840|passage=(smallcaps). (..) To this form belong our gentile nouns Englishman, Welshman, Scotchman, Irishman. These nouns are represented in Irish by adjectives or nouns of the form (1+''ac''): Alban-ac, Scotchman.

  17. A non-Jewish person.

  18. (quote-book)|volume_plain=part II (Of Philosophie)|location=Oxford|publisher=Printed by William Hall, for Thomas Gilbert|year=1671|section=book III|page=253|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=EcOxQ1z6zC8C&pg=PA253|oclc=13589118|passage=Yea farther, ſo glorious, and raviſhing were the firſt dawnings of ''Goſpel light'', which brought ſuch glad tidings of Salvation to Mankind, as that not only the ''Jews'', but alſo ſome ſober minded, inquiſitive ''Gentiles'' rejoyced in this Light for a ſeaſon (..) who yet never had a through work of Converſion on their hearts: (..)

  19. (quote-book); for the benefit of the Literary Fund|Literary Fund|year=1810|volume=II|pages=32–33|oclc=16413653|passage=If a Jew cheated a Gentile one sixth in the purchase or in the sale of any commodity, the Gentile was without remedy; not so if a Gentile imposed on a Jew to the same amount. Theft likewise by a Gentile from a Jew was death, not so if the parties were changed: and the same odious injustice they manifested in their law on homicide. (..) it is rather extraordinary, that (w) should say, the penalty for the death of a native and of a foreigner should be different.

  20. A non-Mormon person.

  21. A noun derived from a noun which denotes something belonging to or coming from a particular city, nation, or country.

  22. kind, courteous

  23. gentle

  24. lovely

  25. (l) (gloss)

  26. (l) (gloss)

  27. (inflection of)

  28. (adj form of)