different between saint vs cephalophore

saint

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /se?nt/
    • Rhymes: -e?nt
  • (UK, as an unstressed, capitalised title) IPA(key): /s?n(t)/, /s?n(t)/

Etymology 1

From Middle English saint, seint, sainct, seinct, sanct, senct, partly from Old English sanct (saint) and confluence with Old French saint, seinte (Modern French saint); both from Latin sanctus (holy, consecrated”, in Late Latin as a noun, “a saint), past participle of sancire (to render sacred, make holy), akin to sacer (holy, sacred). Displaced native Middle English halwe (saint) from Old English h?lga (saint, holy one) (> Modern English hallow (saint)).

Noun

saint (plural saints)

  1. A person whom a church or another religious group has officially recognised as especially holy or godly; one eminent for piety and virtue.
    Kateri Tekakwitha was proclaimed a saint.
  2. (figuratively, by extension) A person with positive qualities; one who does good.
    Dorothy Day was a living saint.
    Thanks for looking after the house while I'm away. You're a saint!
  3. One of the blessed in heaven.
  4. (archaic) A holy object.
Synonyms
  • (holy person): hallow (obsolete)
Derived terms
Translations
See also
  • hallow
  • holos
  • holy

Etymology 2

From Middle English saynten, seinten, sonten, partly from Anglo-Norman saintir and partly from the noun Middle English seint, seynt (see above).

Verb

saint (third-person singular simple present saints, present participle sainting, simple past and past participle sainted)

  1. (transitive) To canonize, to formally recognize someone as a saint.
    Many wish to see Pope John Paul II sainted immediately.
Translations

Further reading

  • saint in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • saint in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

Anagrams

  • Astin, Insta, Santi, Sinta, Tanis, Tians, antis, insta-, sat in, satin, stain, stian, tians, tisan

French

Etymology

From Latin sanctus (holy)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /s??/
  • Rhymes: -??
  • Homophones: sain, sains, saints, sein, seing, seings, seins, ceins, ceint, ceints

Noun

saint m (plural saints, feminine sainte)

  1. saint

Adjective

saint (feminine singular sainte, masculine plural saints, feminine plural saintes)

  1. saintly (all meanings)

Derived terms

Further reading

  • “saint” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Anagrams

  • tians

Irish

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun

saint f (genitive singular sainte)

  1. greed, avarice, covetousness
  2. great eagerness, desire

Declension

Synonyms

  • cíocras, gabhálacht (avarice)

Mutation


Norman

Etymology

From Old French saint, from Latin sanctus (holy).

Pronunciation

Adjective

saint m

  1. (Jersey) holy

Noun

saint m (plural saints)

  1. (Jersey, religion) saint

Old French

Alternative forms

  • sanct (rare)
  • saent (rare)
  • seint (common, chiefly Anglo-Norman)

Etymology

Latin sanctus

Noun

saint m (oblique plural sainz or saintz, nominative singular sainz or saintz, nominative plural saint)

  1. saint

Declension

Adjective

saint m (oblique and nominative feminine singular sainte)

  1. holy
  2. pious; devout

Descendants

  • ? English: saint
  • French: saint
  • Norman: saint (Jersey)

Welsh

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sai?nt/

Noun

saint m pl (not mutable)

  1. plural of sant

saint From the web:

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  • what saints feast day is today
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cephalophore

English

Etymology

From French céphalophore, from Ancient Greek ?????? (kephal?, head) + -phore, from Ancient Greek -????? (-phoros, bearing), a derivative of ???? (phér?, I bear, I carry)

Noun

cephalophore (plural cephalophores)

  1. (Roman Catholicism) any of a group of saints depicted in art carrying heads in their hands.
    Similarly, it is clear that the whole company of martyrs, of whom legend relates that they carried their heads after death, the céphalophores, arose from a widely known form of iconography.
    Gordon Hall Gerould, Saints' Legends (1916), p. 51
    Likely referencing an article by Marcel Hébert, "Les martyrs céphalophores Euchaire, in Elophe et Libaire", in Revue de l'Université de Bruxelles, v. 19 (1914).
  2. (obsolete) The family of mollusks with distinct heads.
  3. (obsolete) The family of ventricose and filiform mushrooms.

cephalophore From the web:

  • what does cephalophore mean
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