different between incorrupt vs immaculate
incorrupt
English
Etymology
in- +? corrupt
Adjective
incorrupt (not comparable)
- not corrupt, void of moral corruption
- free from physical decay
Derived terms
- incorruptness
incorrupt From the web:
- what incorruptible saints
- incorrupt meaning
- what incorruptus mean
- incorruptible what does that mean
- what does incorrupt body mean
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- what does incorruptible mean in the bible
- what causes incorruptible corpses
immaculate
English
Etymology
From Middle English immaculat, from Latin immacul?tus; prefix im- (“not”) + macul?tus, perfect passive participle of macul? (“I spot, stain”), from macula (“spot”). See mail (armor).
Displaced native unwemmed (“pure, untainted”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??mækj?l?t/
Adjective
immaculate (comparative more immaculate, superlative most immaculate)
- Having no stain or blemish; spotless, undefiled, clear, clean, pure.
- 1641, John Denham, The Sophy
- Were but my soul as pure From other guilt as that, Heaven did not hold One more immaculate
- 1641, John Denham, The Sophy
- (zoology) Lacking spots, blotches, or other markings; spotless; unspotted.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
Latin
Participle
immacul?te
- vocative masculine singular of immacul?tus
immaculate From the web:
- what immaculate means
- what immaculate conception means
- what immaculate conception
- what's immaculate heart
- what immaculate mean in arabic
- what's immaculate in french
- what immaculate means in spanish
- what's immaculate deception
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