different between exodus vs pentateuch
exodus
English
Etymology
From Latin exodus, from Ancient Greek ?????? (éxodos, “expedition, procession, departure”). Doublet of exodos.From late Old English only as a proper noun, Exodus, the biblical book; use as a common noun is from the early 17th century.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??ks?d?s/, /???z?d?s/
Noun
exodus (plural exoduses)
- A sudden departure of a large number of people.
- There was an exodus when the show ended.
- In the movie The Sinking of Japan, virtually all Japanese desperately try to find any form of transportation out of Japan in a massive exodus to flee the sinking country.
Translations
Verb
exodus (third-person singular simple present exoduses, present participle exodusing, simple past and past participle exodused)
- To depart from a place in a large group.
Further reading
- Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “exodus”, in Online Etymology Dictionary
Anagrams
- udoxes
Dutch
Pronunciation
Noun
exodus m (plural exodussen, diminutive exodusje n)
- exodus
Synonyms
- uittocht
exodus From the web:
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pentateuch
pentateuch From the web:
- what pentateuch means
- what is pentateuch all about
- what are pentateuch books
- what is pentateuch pdf
- what is pentateuch pronounce
- what is pentateuchal criticism
- what is pentateuch in judaism
- what do pentateuch mean
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