prophet-

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Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von prophet- im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
peygamber

Evet, benim de peygamberle bir ilişkim var. - Yes, I also have a relationship with the prophet.

Allah'tan başka Tanrı yoktur ve Muhammed onun peygamberidir. - There is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is his prophet.

<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
hazreti muhammed
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
tanrı elçisi
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
(isim) peygamber, resul, kâhin
weather <span class="word-self">prophetspan>
meteoroloji uzmanı
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
nebi
the <span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
Hz. Muhammed

Hz. Muhammed 632'de Medine'de vefat etti. - The prophet Muhammad died in Medina in 632.

being a <span class="word-self">prophetspan>
nübüvvet
false <span class="word-self">prophetspan>
sahte peygamber
last <span class="word-self">prophetspan>
son peygamber
<span class="word-self">prophetspan> abraham
ibrahim peygamber
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
kahin
<span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
nebevi
<span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
siyer
<span class="word-self">Prophetspan> Jesus
(Din) Hazreti İsa peygamber
<span class="word-self">Prophetspan> Muhammad
(Din) Hazreti Muhammed peygamber
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
peygamberi
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
yalvaç

Kitap getirmiş peygamber, elçi, resul.

<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
nebie
<span class="word-self">prophetspan> of doom
hep kötülük kehanetlerinde bulunan kimse
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
nebiye
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
kahin/savunucu/peygamber
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
bilhassa Allah için söz söyleyen kimse
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
prophetesskadın peygamber
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
kâhin
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
savacı
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
enbiya
<span class="word-self">prophetspan> harun
harun peygamber
Englisch - Englisch

Definition von prophet- im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch

<span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
any of the prophets mentioned in the Bible, especially an author of one of the Prophets
<span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
Jesus
<span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
Muhammad (used with The)
piss-<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
One who diagnosed diseases by inspecting urine
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
Someone who speaks by divine inspiration
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
Someone who predicts the future; a soothsayer
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A mantis
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
{n} a man who foretels future events, a divine teacher
Companions of the <span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
Arabic Sahaba or Ashab Followers of Muhammad who had personal contact with him, including any Muslim contemporary who saw him. As eyewitnesses, they are the most important sources of Hadth. Sunnite Muslims regard the first four caliphs (among the 10 Companions to whom Muhammad promised paradise) as the most important. Shite Muslims disregard the Companions, whom they consider responsible for the loss of the caliphate by the family of Al
Dark <span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
prophet of doom
<span class="word-self">Prophetspan>'s Mosque
House of worship built on the site of Muhammad's house in Medina, considered one of the three holiest places of Islam. It was originally a simple brick structure surrounding an enclosed courtyard where people gathered to hear Muhammad. Muhammad later built roofed galleries to shelter his visitors, and in 628 a pulpit was added to raise him above the crowd. In 706 Caliph al-Wald I pulled down the original building and built a mosque on the site, which contains Muhammad's tomb. The mosque served as the model for later Islamic architecture
The <span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
orig. Tenskwatawa born March 1768, Old Chillicothe, Ohio died 1834, Argentine, Kan., U.S. North American Indian leader. The brother of Tecumseh, he maintained a strong following among the Shawnee on the strength of his 1805 declaration that he had received a message from the "Master of Life" and had contact with the supernatural. Advocating a return to traditional ways of life, he rejected the white man's introduction of alcohol, textile clothing, and individual ownership of property, and he worked with Tecumseh for an Indian confederacy to resist U.S. encroachment on Indian land. In Tecumseh's absence he allowed the Shawnee to be drawn into and defeated at the Battle of Tippecanoe (1811)
The <span class="word-self">Prophetspan>
poetic work written by Kahlil Gibran in 1923
false <span class="word-self">prophetspan>
prophet who does not tell the truth
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
The person who tells the future In Christianity, a prophet cannot predict the future through his own ability or enhanced powers God reveals it to him in a vision or dream A true prophet must be 100% accurate all the time The only exception is a "conditional" prophecy Where the prophet clearly states that IF "X" is done then event "Y" will happen (See psychic)
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A prophet is someone who predicts that something will happen in the future. I promised myself I'd defy all the prophets of doom and battle back to fitness. Person who speaks by divine inspiration, revealing or interpreting the will of a god. Prophets have appeared in many religions throughout history. The most familiar in the West are such Old Testament leaders as Moses, Isaiah, and Daniel, along with the Prophet Muhammad. In contrast to the diviner or interpreter of omens (see divination), who may answer private questions, prophets often address the destiny and moral life of a whole people. Some prophets seek to create a new society that will realize their message and thus found new religions. Others may look only to reform or purify an existing society and religion. The tone of prophecy ranges widely, from ecstasy, inspired utterance, and ethical fervor to passionate social criticism, prediction of the future, and expectation of apocalypse. Companions of the Prophet Prophet's Mosque Prophet The
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
in the Anthropology of Religion, "a religious practitioner who receives his authority by some prophetic call and proclaims revitalization and change of society without being accountable to any religious bureaucracy" (Van Rheenen 1996a, 150)
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A prophet is a religious functionary set aside or specially appointed by (a) god for a number of religious and political tasks
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
a person who brings a message or warning
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A person inspired by God to speak for him A person inspired by God to speak for him
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
One who speaks for God giving His message to others
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
one who foretells the future or interprets divine will, as in: Jeremiah is a prophet named in the Bible who was persecuted for his beliefs
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A prophet is a person who has received a specific and personal call from God to be a means of communicating God's word This word may be dealing with the future or it may be shedding light on a current or past situation There are true and false prophets A true prophet's words will come true (2 Peter 1: 20-21 and Deuteronomy 13: 1-5) Prophecy in the Church today must be consistent with the Scriptures and tested by the community and its leaders
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A person who proclaims a message from God For example, Moses was a prophet
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A person who proclaims a message from God The term usually refers to certain men in the Old Testament, but the New Testament speaks of prophets in the early church John the Baptist is also called a prophet
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
{i} one who predicts the future, seer; forecaster, foreteller
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A person chosen by God to teach people about the will of Allah Sometimes providing both evidence of miracles and revelation of commandments
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
(Heb nabi, from a root meaning "to bubble forth, as from a fountain," hence "to utter", comp Ps 45: 1) This Hebrew word is the first and the most generally used for a prophet In the time of Samuel another word, ro'eh, "seer", began to be used (1 Sam 9: 9) It occurs seven times in reference to Samuel Afterwards another word, hozeh, "seer" (2 Sam 24: 11), was employed In 1 Ch 29: 29 all these three words are used: "Samuel the seer (ro'eh), Nathan the prophet (nabi'), Gad the seer" (hozeh) In Josh 13: 22 Balaam is called (Heb ) a kosem "diviner," a word used only of a false prophet
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
someone who speaks by divine inspiration; someone who is an interpreter of the will of God
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A human spokesperson for God in Western religions, allegedly chosen and enabled by God to declare and make known his revelation to human beings, which revelation typically involves (in part at least) some divine moral expectation that needs to be heeded to get in right relationship with God
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
One who prophesies, or foretells events; a predicter; a foreteller
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
   Greek, "one who speaks out " A prophet, called by God to speak the truth no matter what the cost, was one of the main participants in classical Israelite religion The prophet was charged with the role of delivering God's message to the rulers, whether religious or political, and, as a result, many prophets were unpopular with the kings and priests Prophets did not specialize in predicting the future, but rather analyzing the present and announcing the consequences of current behavior Most prophets spoke in a very memorable poetic form, delivering their statement orally in the streets or sanctuaries; only later were these written down, and still later put in some sort of order
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
One who receives inspiration, information, or insights into the future from a divine source
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
From the Greek meaning "one who speaks for another " In the Hebrew and Christian tradition it is one who speaks with the authority of God In a secondary meaning, it is one who speaks about the future with authority
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
an authoritative person who divines the future
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
One inspired or instructed by God to speak in his name, or announce future events, as, Moses, Elijah, etc
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A prophet is a person who is believed to be chosen by God to say the things that God wants to tell people. the sacred name of the Holy Prophet of Islam
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
A person chosen by Allah to instruct people as to the will of Allah The Muslim prophets are the same as Christian and Hebrew prophets and include Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
Prophetic Tradition: from the Greek, "one who speaks for someone else;" refers primarily to the Hebrew literary tradition of the prophetic figures who were called by God to "remind" Israel of the expectations of the covenant The prophets addressed the behavior of individual kings as well as the social fabric of Israel as a whole
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
An interpreter; a spokesman
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
Head priest
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
an authoritative person who divines the future someone who speaks by divine inspiration; someone who is an interpreter of the will of God
<span class="word-self">prophetspan>
one who utters divinely inspired revelations
the <span class="word-self">prophetspan> Ezekiel
one of the Biblical prophets
the <span class="word-self">prophetspan> Isaiah
one of the Biblical prophets
the <span class="word-self">prophetspan> Jeremiah
one of the Biblical prophets