Wiktionary
vb. (context transitive English) To grout again.
n. Any of the genus ''Atriplex'' of plants, especially ''Atriplex hortensis'' or (taxlink Atriplex patula species noshow=1), found in dry habitats, that have edible leaves resembling spinach, including many desert and seashore plants and halophytes.
vb. (en-past of: retee)
n. (plural of sidelock English)
n. (context idiomatic formulaic English) A minimal level of competence or effectiveness, as used in phrases where one is unable to perform.
n. (context dated nautical English) A sailor.
n. the state of being immaterial; immateriality
vb. (context transitive English) to make more shiny, attractive or elegant.
adv. 1 In a trophic manner 2 With regard to nutrition
n. The stages of film (or audio) production happening between the actual filming (or recording) and the completed product.
adv. To appearances; apparently.
n. (plural of theatricalization English)
vb. (en-third-person singularbrown out)
alt. (context soccer English) A chance to clear the ball to an attacking teammate, or such an attacker; a target man. n. (context soccer English) A chance to clear the ball to an attacking teammate, or such an attacker; a target man.
a. (obsolete form of armorial English)
n. (context zoology English) Any member of the Campanulariidae.
alt. (context US English) (present participle of recognize English) vb. (context US English) (present participle of recognize English)
n. (plural of knuckleduster English)
vb. (past participle of take out English)
n. (plural of binner English)
Usage examples of "binners".
People would complete his mission, even if they must wrest it from his own apostate race, and die Synod had elevated the son of a lowly mining engineer to the primacy of New New Hebrides to oversee that completion.
This is the chalice from which the assembled prelates of Phos drank together in ritual renunciation of Skotos at the great synod not long after the High Temple was built.
Without expecting the royal license, he escaped from his guards, precipitately embarked, deserted the imperfect synod, and retired to his episcopal fortress of safety and independence.
But as the debates of so tumultuous an assembly could not have been directed by the authority of reason, or influenced by the art of policy, the Persian synod was reduced, by successive operations, to forty thousand, to four thousand, to four hundred, to forty, and at last to seven Magi, the most respected for their learning and piety.
I told you that the Synod had identified you as a nexus in the reticulum, a critical junction.
The building of the skete was a radical departure from the Spiritual Regulations of the Holy Synod, which had banned such hermitages since 1721.
Impatient of a delay, which he stigmatized as voluntary and culpable, Cyril announced the opening of the synod sixteen days after the festival of Pentecost.
The surviving Synod had gotten together, canonized its dead Prophet, anointed a new Prophet in his stead, and announced its determination to pursue the jihad even unto martyrdom.
In 850 the synod of Pavia resolved that all who refused to submit to the discipline of the Church should be anathematised, and cut off from every Christian hope and consolation.
With equal haste and violence, the Oriental synod of fifty bishops degraded Cyril and Memnon from their episcopal honors, condemned, in the twelve anathemas, the purest venom of the Apollinarian heresy, and described the Alexandrian primate as a monster, born and educated for the destruction of the church.
It was during this truce that the best-known events of Dutch history occurred--the Synod of Dort, the suppression of the Republicans and Arminians by Maurice of Nassau, when he put Olden Barnevelt to death, and compelled the most illustrious of all Dutchmen, Grotius, to make his escape packed in a box of books.
Happily, the sainted Bishop Ambrose had the foresight to weight that synod with other Athanasian bishops.
The Saxon colonists in this state welcomed the Reformation, formally recognizing the Augsburg Confession in a synod of 1572.
The patriotic Cyprian, who ruled with the most absolute sway the church of Carthage and the provincial synods, opposed with resolution and success the ambition of the Roman pontiff, artfully connected his own cause with that of the eastern bishops, and, like Hannibal, sought out new allies in the heart of Asia.
I found accounts of the Synod of Whitby that ousted the Culdee or Irish version of Christianity.