different between resurrection vs recusation

resurrection

English

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman resurrectiun, from Old French resurrection (French: résurrection), from Late Latin resurrectionem (accusative of resurrecti?) from Latin resurg? (I rise again), from re- (again), + surg? (I rise).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??z????k??n/, /??z????k?n?/
  • Rhymes: -?k??n

Noun

resurrection (countable and uncountable, plural resurrections)

  1. The act of arising from the dead and becoming alive again.
  2. (archaic) bodysnatching

Synonyms

  • (rising from the dead): gainrising (obsolete)

Derived terms

  • resurrectional
  • resurrectionism
  • resurrectionist
  • resurrection man

Related terms

  • resurge
  • resurrect

Translations

Anagrams

  • intercourser

resurrection From the web:

  • what resurrection means
  • what resurrection means to me
  • what resurrection does
  • what's resurrection day
  • what's resurrection in battlefront 2
  • what's resurrection in german
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recusation

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin recusatio, recusationis. Compare French récusation.

Noun

recusation (countable and uncountable, plural recusations)

  1. (obsolete) refusal
  2. (law) The act of disqualifying a judge or jury in a specific case on the grounds of possible partiality or prejudice.
    • 1750, William Blackstone, An Essay on Collateral Consanguinity
      [] permit a man to refuse a judge, if he himself is of opinion he has any cause, without assigning what that cause is, is therefore in general very silent about what sort of consanguinity is, or is not, a good ground for recusation

Related terms

  • recuse

Translations

Anagrams

  • Carnoustie, cautioners, nectarious, noctuaries, reauctions

recusation From the web:

  • revocation means
  • what does recusation
  • what does requisition means
  • what does revocation mean
  • what is meant by revocation
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