Whore, Whoredom hor, hordum. See CRIMES; HARLOT; PUNISHMENTS. Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Author: Administrador
Whore
Whore WHORE.This term is generally replaced in RV [Note: Revised Version.] by harlot (wh. see). Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible Whore Revenues of, not to be brought to the sanctuary Deu 23:18 Harlot Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible WHORE See under WOMAN. WIFE. See under MARRIAGE. Fuente: A Symbolical Dictionary Whore Jer 3:3 (a) GOD … Continue reading “Whore”
WHOLENESS OR HEALTH RESTORED
WHOLENESS OR HEALTH RESTORED Mat 9:22; Mat 14:36; Mat 15:28; Luk 7:10; Luk 8:49; Luk 8:50; Joh 7:23; Act 4:9; Act 4:10; Act 9:34 –SEE Christ Heals, 1539 Fuente: Thompson Chain-Reference Bible
Whole, Wholesome
Whole, Wholesome hol, holsum: Whole, originally hale (a word still in poetic use), had at first the meaning now expressed by its derivative healthy. In this sense whole is fairly common (Job 5:18, etc.) in English Versions of the Bible, although much more common in the New Testament than in the Old Testament. From this … Continue reading “Whole, Wholesome”
Whole (made), Wholly, Wholesome
Whole (made), Wholly, Wholesome for which see ALL, A, No. 3, and ALTOGETHER, signifies “whole,” (a) with a noun, e.g., Mat 5:29-30; Mar 8:36; Mar 15:1, Mar 15:16, Mar 15:33; Luk 11:36 (1st part), though holon may here be used adverbially with photeinon, “wholly light” [as in the 2nd part, RV, “wholly (full of light)”]; … Continue reading “Whole (made), Wholly, Wholesome”
Whole
Whole The term “whole” has been used frequently in attempts to describe or to explain certain features of biological, psychological, or sociological (but sometimes also of physical and chemical) phenomena which were said to be inaccessible to a “merely mechanistic” or “summative” analysis. In fact, most applications of the concept of whole explicitly resort to … Continue reading “Whole”
Who, Whom, Whose
Who, Whom, Whose * Notes: These are usually the translations of forms of the relative pronoun hos, or of the interrogative pronoun tis; otherwise of hostis, “whoever,” usually of a more general subject than hos, e.g., Mar 15:7; Luk 23:19; Gal 2:4; hosos, “as many as,” Heb 2:15; in Act 13:7, AV, houtos, “this (man),” … Continue reading “Who, Whom, Whose”
Who Madest All and Dost Control
Who Madest All and Dost Control Hymn for Wednesday at Matins; attributed to Pope Saint Gregory the Great. It has 13 translations. The English title given is by Cardinal Newman. Fuente: New Catholic Dictionary
Whitty, Rose
Whitty, Rose Born at Dublin, Ireland, 24 November, 1831; died 4 May, 1911. Of her two sisters one became a religious of the Sacred Heart; the other, like herself, joined the Order of St. Dominic and in 1870 led a band of sisters to New Zealand, where she laboured till her death in 1911. Sister … Continue reading “Whitty, Rose”
Whitty, Robert
Whitty, Robert Born at Pouldarrig near Oylgate, 7 January, 1817; died 1 September, 1895. In 1830 he entered Maynooth College in his fourteenth year. Having added two years on the Dumboyne Establishment to his college course, he was still too young for ordination. He offered his services to Dr. Griffiths, Vicar Apostolic of the London … Continue reading “Whitty, Robert”