biblical

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English - English
Alternative capitalization of biblical
In the expression "of biblical proportions", very large, exceeding previous records
In accordance with the teachings of the Bible (according to some interpretation of the later)

biblical morality.

Of, or relating to, the Bible
{a} of or relating to the bible or divinity
of or pertaining to or contained in or in accordance with the Bible; "biblical names"; "biblical Hebrew"
Biblical means contained in or relating to the Bible. The community's links with Syria date back to biblical times. relating to or written in the Bible
from the Bible
In the expression "of biblical proportions", very large, exceeding previous records. "
Father of Biblical criticism and exegesis Origen (185-254)
in keeping with the nature of the Bible or its times or people; "biblical styles in writing"; "a beard of biblical proportions"; "biblical costumes"
of or pertaining to or contained in or in accordance with the Bible; "biblical names"; "biblical Hebrew" in keeping with the nature of the Bible or its times or people; "biblical styles in writing"; "a beard of biblical proportions"; "biblical costumes
in keeping with the nature of the Bible or its times or people; "biblical styles in writing"; "a beard of biblical proportions"; "biblical costumes
Pertaining to, or derived from, the Bible; as, biblical learning; biblical authority
{s} from the Bible, of the Holy Scriptures
Bible
Biblical Aramaic
the form of the Aramaic language that is used in the books of Daniel, Ezra and a few other places in the Hebrew Bible
Biblical Hebrew
the Hebrew language as used in the Old Testament, between the 12th and 6th centuries before Common Era
Biblical Latin
Late Latin, as used in translations and commentaries on the Bible, influenced by biblical Greek and Hebrew
biblical blue
A particular, possibly blue, color mentioned in the Old Testament
biblical mythologies
plural form of biblical mythology
biblical mythology
The mythology giving rise to, and contained within, the Bible; the religious text of Christianity
biblical mythology
A grouping of the elements of this mythology
Biblical Latin
form of Latin used in the translation of the Bible
Biblical concordance
alphabetical listing of words along with the place they appear in the Bible
Biblical figure
character described in the Bible
Biblical literature
literature which deals with the subject matter found in the Bible
biblical aramaic
the form of Aramaic that was spoken in Palestine in the time of the New Testament
biblical language
form of Hebrew in which the Bible was written
biblical law
tenets and commandments appearing in the bible
biblical scholar
one who studies and is proficient in the bible
biblical source
Any of the original oral or written materials compiled as the Bible. While authorship of many biblical books is anonymous or pseudonymous, scholars have used internal evidence and the tools of biblical criticism to identify sources and arrange them in chronological order of composition. There are four sources for the Pentateuch: J (sources in which God is called YHWH, German JHVH), eastern (sources in which God is called Elohim), D (sources in the style of Deuteronomy), and P (for sources with priestly style and content). Parts of lost books have also been identified in the Old Testament. New Testament sources include original writings and oral traditions. The first three (synoptic) Gospels have a common source, Matthew and Luke being based on Mark and a lost source called Q; John conveys an independent tradition. Biblical sources are studied to uncover the history of the scriptures and to restore texts as closely as possible to their original content. Scholars may also analyze biblical sources in an effort to reconstruct the oral tradition behind them
biblical translation
Art and practice of translating the Bible. The Old Testament was originally written in Hebrew, with scattered passages of Aramaic. It was first translated in its entirety into Aramaic and then, in the 3rd century AD, into Greek (the Septuagint). Hebrew scholars created the authoritative Masoretic text (6th-10th century) from Aramaic Targums, the original Hebrew scrolls having been lost. The New Testament was originally in Greek or Aramaic. Christians translated both Testaments into Coptic, Ethiopian, Gothic, and Latin. St. Jerome's Latin Vulgate (405) was the standard Christian translation for 1,000 years. New learning in the 15th-16th century generated new translations. Martin Luther translated the entire Bible into German (1522-34). The first complete English translation, credited to John Wycliffe, appeared in 1382, but it was the King James version (1611) that became the standard for more than three centuries. By the late 20th century the entire Bible had been translated into 250 languages and portions of it into more than 1,300
extra-Biblical
Pertaining to information or content outside the Bible
of biblical proportions
By extension, of or pertaining to a thing or occurrence having vast size, extent, or consequences

He also drilled into us that all the secrets of the structure of matter were implicit in Charlotte Moore's tables, which assumed an authority and role of biblical proportions.

of biblical proportions
Of or pertaining to a natural disaster or other cataclysmic event so immense that it brings to mind biblical accounts of horrific catastrophes

In the midst of a national disaster of biblical proportions, it is difficult for the American people to participate fully in the selection of the next chief justice.

Movement for Biblical Israel
Israeli political party that joined the rightist "Likud" party and received one seat in the eighth Knesset
biblically
According to the Bible
biblically
from a biblical point of view, in a biblical manner, according to the Bible
biblical

    Hyphenation

    bib·li·cal

    Turkish pronunciation

    bîblıkıl

    Pronunciation

    /ˈbəbləkəl/ /ˈbɪbləkəl/

    Videos

    ... Biblical senses. ...
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