Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
idiomatic .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Examples
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He wrote a work entitled "Ars addicendi atque docendi idiomata", and likewise a "Lexicon, seu vocabularium v erborum, adverbiorum, etc.", for the use of missionaries among the
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For he denied a true communication of the idiomata or attributes of both natures in Christ, and in this way separated the person of Christ: which thing Dr. Luther has perspicuously set forth in his book on the Councils.
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CbaWaico, Syriaco atque Hebxai - eo excerpta veljm adnotemus, ex quibus manifefto conftet vete - jra baec idiomata qum hodierna Melkenfi valde convenire, eo fermepa&oquoolim haeccumil - jis conveoiebat: quod compror bari poteft innumeris vocabuiis, quae in die eodem fenfu-ac fono ex pre noftro proferuntur.
Michaelis Antonii Vassalli Mylsen Phoenico-Punicum, sive, Grammatica Melitensis
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(perichoretic union and the communicatio idiomata)
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Trinity, speaking of the three Persons as idiomata "which we call
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
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