different between monastic vs cenobite

monastic

English

Alternative forms

  • monastick

Etymology

From Middle French monastique, from Late Latin monasticus.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /m??næst?k/
  • Rhymes: -æst?k

Adjective

monastic (comparative more monastic, superlative most monastic)

  1. Of or relating to monasteries or monks.

Derived terms

  • semimonastic

Related terms

  • monastery
  • monasticism
  • monk

Translations

Noun

monastic (plural monastics)

  1. A person with monastic ways; a monk.

Translations


Friulian

Adjective

monastic

  1. monastic

Romanian

Etymology

From French monastique

Adjective

monastic m or n (feminine singular monastic?, masculine plural monastici, feminine and neuter plural monastice)

  1. monastic

Declension

Further reading

  • monastic in DEX online - Dic?ionare ale limbii române (Dictionaries of the Romanian language)

monastic From the web:

  • what monasticism mean
  • what monastic tradition
  • what monastic order
  • what monastic community
  • monastic meaning
  • what monastic rule
  • what monastic vows
  • monastic what is the definition


cenobite

English

Alternative forms

  • coenobite
  • cœnobite (obsolete)

Etymology

From Old French cenobite or Ecclesiastical Latin coenob?ta, from coenobium, from Ancient Greek ????????? (koinóbion, community life, convent), from ?????? (koinós, common) + ???? (bíos, life).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: s?n??-b?t', s??n?-
  • IPA(key): /?si?n?ba?t/

Noun

cenobite (plural cenobites)

  1. A new or recent member of a Greek monastic religious order; a caloyer.
  2. A monk who lives in a religious community, rather than in solitude.
  3. (fiction) A torturous demon creature made famous by the Hellraiser series.

Translations

See also

  • monk
  • nun
  • religious

Old French

Noun

cenobite m (oblique plural cenobites, nominative singular cenobites, nominative plural cenobite)

  1. cenobite (monk who lives in a religious community, rather than in solitude)

Descendants

  • ? English: cenobite
  • French: cénobite

cenobite From the web:

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