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Answer for the clue "Father, Son and Holy Spirit, e.g ", 6 letters:
triune

Alternative clues for the word triune

Word definitions for triune in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"three in one," 1630s, from tri- + Latin unus "one" (see one ). Related: Triunity .

Usage examples of triune.

However he read the compass of the skies, in triune, sextile or quartile, the distant lights drew no pattern.

All has its origin and prototype in the Triune God, and throughout expresses unity in triplicity and triplicity in unity, without which there is no real being and no actual or possible life.

Triune Deity represented by the cord of the initiate, our cable tow, 361-u.

In other words, nothing truly novel happened to the triune brain during that period, no new major biospheric evolution occurred.

This triune structure, as much as anything else, imparts power to the tail.

In this "Ware-Atoua," sacred house, the priests or arikis taught the Maories about a Triune God, father, son, and bird, or spirit.

These interiors (UL) are correlated, we saw, with specific exteriors (UR), so that emotions "go with" limbic systems and concepts "go with" the neocortex of complex triune brains, and so forth (that is, every point on the right side has a correlate on the left side: every exterior has an interior).

Skirrik of all ages—from the dewiest youths (antennas just budding, the only jet they had the hatchday triangle set between their triune eyes) to ancient females, their burnished exoskeletons a deep purple with scarlet glows.

I’ve seen everything from mobies to triunes to flashers to drillbits, and they don’t look like this.

A smaller glare (off) was the triune family, now joined for cursorial hunting, not that they'd ever catch Fiutterby.

The concept of the triune brain is in remarkable accord with the conclusions, drawn independently from studies of biain \o body mass ratios in the previous chapter, that the emergence of mammals and of primates (especially humans) was accompanied by major bursts in brain evolution.

Even the cursed Triunes have begun to recognize that their rejection of Manicheanism was correct, but for the wrong reasons—but save that for another day, when perhaps you know what an old man is rambling on about.

The most widely known hypothesis that is at least reminiscent of the triune brain is Sigmund Freud's division of the human psyche into id, ego and superego.