The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hypostasis \Hy*pos"ta*sis\, n.; pl. Hypostases. [L., fr. Gr. ? subsistence, substance, fr. ? to stand under; ? under + ? to stand, middle voice of ? to cause to stand. See Hypo-, and Stand.]
That which forms the basis of anything; underlying principle; a concept or mental entity conceived or treated as an existing being or thing.
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(Theol.) Substance; subsistence; essence; person; personality; -- used by the early theologians to denote any one of the three subdivisions of the Godhead, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Note: The Council of Alexandria (a. d. 362) defined hypostasis as synonymous with person.
--Schaff-Herzog. Principle; an element; -- used by the alchemists in speaking of salt, sulphur, and mercury, which they considered as the three principles of all material bodies.
(Med.) That which is deposited at the bottom of a fluid; sediment.
Wiktionary
n. (plural of hypostasis English)
WordNet
n. the suppression of a gene by the effect of an unrelated gene [syn: epistasis]
the accumulation of blood in an organ
any of the three persons of the Godhead constituting the Trinity especially the person of Christ in which divine and human natures are united
(metaphysics) essential nature or underlying reality
[also: hypostases (pl)]
See hypostasis
Usage examples of "hypostases".
A green book hardly larger than my hand and no thicker than my index finger appeared to be a collection of devotions, full of enameled pictures of ascetic pantocrators and hypostases with black halos and gemlike robes.