EVANGELIZATION
EVANGELIZA'TION, noun The act of evnagelizing.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
2.893 entradas
EVANGELIZA'TION, noun The act of evnagelizing.
EVAN'GELIZE, verb transitive [Low Latin evangelizo.] To instruct in the gospel; to preach the gospel to, and convert to a belief of the gospel; as, to evangelize heathen nations...
EVAN'GELIZED, participle passive Instructed in the gospel; converted to a belief of the gospel, or to christianity.
EVAN'GELIZING, participle present tense Instructing in the doctrines and precepts of the gospel; converting to christianity.
EVAN'GELY, noun Good tidings; the gospel. [Not in use.]
EVAN'ID, adjective [Latin evanidus. See Vain.]Faint; weak; evanescent; liable to vanish or disappear; as an evanid color or smell.
EVAN'ISH, verb intransitive [Latin evanesco. See Vain.] To vanish; to disappear; to escape from sight or perception. [Vanish is more generally used.]
EVAN'ISHMENT, noun A vanishing; disappearance.
EVAP'ORABLE, adjective [See Evaporate.] That may be converted into vapor and pass off in fumes; that may be dissipated by evaporation.
EVAP'ORATE, verb intransitive [Latin evaporo; e and vaporo, from vapor, which see.]1. To pass off in vapor, as a fluid; to escape and be dissipated, either in visible vapor, or ...
EVAP'ORATED, participle passive Converted into vapor or steam and dissipated; dissipated in insensible particles, as a fluid.
EVAP'ORATING, participle present tense Resolving into vapor; dissipating, as a fluid.
EVAPORA'TION, noun The conversion of a fluid into vapor specifically lighter than the atmospheric air. evaporation is increased by heat and is followed by cold. It is now genera...
EVAPOROM'ETER, noun [Latin evaporo, and Gr. measure.]An instrument for ascertaining the quantity of a fluid evaporated in a given time; an atmometer.
EVA'SION, noun s as z. [Latin evasio, from evado, evasi. See Evade.]The act of eluding or avoiding, or of escaping, particularly from the pressure of an argument, from an accusa...
EVA'SIVE, adjective Using evasion or artifice to avoid; elusive; shuffling; equivocating.He--answered evasive of the sly request.1. Containing evasion; artfully contrived to elu...
EVA'SIVELY, adverb By evasion or subterfuge; elusively; in a manner to avoid a direct reply or a charge.
EVA'SIVENESS, noun The quality or state of being evasive.
EVE, noun The consort of Adam, and mother of the human race; so called by Adam, because she was the mother of all living. In this case, the word would properly belong to the Heb...
EVEC'TION, noun [Latin eveho, to carry away.] A carrying out or away; also, a lifting or extolling; exaltation.
E'VENEVE, noun e'vn.1. The decline of the sun; the latter part or close of the day, and beginning of the night. Eve is used chiefly in poetry. In prose, we generally use evening...
E'VEN-SONG, noun A song for the evening; a form of worship for the evening.1. The evening, or close of the day.
E'VEN-TIDE, noun Literally, the time of evening; that is, evening.Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the even-tide Genesis 24:63.This word is nearly obsolete; tide being...
EVE'NE, verb intransitive [Latin evenio.] To happen. [Not in use.]
E'VENED, participle passive Made even or level.
E'VENER, noun One that makes even.
E'VENHAND, noun Equality.