different between satan vs hellfire

satan

English

Etymology 1

See Satan: from Latin Sat?n, from Ancient Greek ????? (Satán), from Hebrew ??????? (S?t?n, adversary, accuser).

Noun

satan (plural satans)

  1. Alternative form of Satan (especially in the sense "a demon follower of Satan; a fallen angel").
    • 1993, Jacob Lassner, Demonizing the Queen of Sheba, page 199,
      According to Wahb b. Munnabih, Muhammad b. Ka‘b, and other authorities: Solomon was led to this [test of her intelligence] because the satans feared that he would marry her and make her desirous of having his offspring. She would then disclose to him the secrets of the jinn, and they would never rid themselves of their subservience to Solomon and his offspring to follow.
    • 2004, Mark Allan Powell, 6: Satan and the Demons, Kathleen E. Corley, Robert L. Webb (editors), Jesus and Mel Gibson?s The Passion of the Christ: The Film, the Gospels and the Claims of History, page 72,
      He tells them to go away, calling them ‘You little satans!’ and then the children?s faces become ghoulish and they begin snapping at him, trying to bite him. A short time later, we see Judas being chased by about a dozen of these children; he falls and they kick and hit him. Twice, we see the figure of Satan (recognizable from the opening scene) standing among the demon-children.

Etymology 2

Noun

satan (plural satans)

  1. Obsolete form of satin.

Anagrams

  • Santa, antas, asant, naats, taans, tanas

Azerbaijani

Participle

satan

  1. subject non-past participle of satmaq

Esperanto

Adjective

satan

  1. accusative singular of sata

French

Noun

satan m (plural satans)

  1. Alternative form of Satan

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Satan.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sa?tan/ (example of pronunciation)

Noun

satan

  1. bastard; sly person

Interjection

satan

  1. (vulgar) fuck; shit
    Satan! Det gjer vondt!
    Fuck! This hurts!
    Satan då!
    Holy shit!
    Fuck this!

Slovak

Etymology 1

From Ecclesiastical Latin sat?n, from Ancient Greek ????? (Satán), ????? (Satân) from Hebrew ??????? (????n, adversary, accuser).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?sa.tan]
  • Rhymes: -an, -tan
  • Hyphenation: sa?tan

Noun

satan m (genitive singular satana, nominative plural satani, declension pattern of chlap)

  1. Satan, the Devil, the supreme evil spirit, who rules Hell
  2. (expressive, derogatory) a person or animal regarded as particularly malignant, detestable, or evil
Declension
Alternative forms
  • satanáš m
Related terms
  • satanský, satansky
  • satanstvo n
  • satanista m, satanistka f, satanistický, satanizmus m

Etymology 2

Shortening of the taxonomic name hríb satanský, a calque of the species name Rubroboletus satanas. See satan, etymology 1.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?sa.tan]
  • Rhymes: -an, -tan
  • Hyphenation: sa?tan

Noun

satan m (genitive singular satana, nominative plural satany, declension pattern of dub)

  1. (colloquial) a poisonous fungus of the bolete family, Rubroboletus satanas (earlier: Boletus satanas), with a pale cap and a red-patterned stem
    Synonym: (taxonomic name) hríb satanský
Declension
Related terms
  • satanský
  • hríb

References

Further reading

  • satan in Slovak dictionaries at korpus.sk

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s???tan/

Interjection

satan

  1. (vulgar) Used to express anger, irritation, disappointment, annoyance, contempt, etc. A swear word.

See also

  • Satan

Anagrams

  • anats, ansat, antas

satan From the web:

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hellfire

English

Etymology

From Middle English helle fire, helever, from Old English hellef?r, equivalent to hell +? fire. Cognate with West Frisian helfjoer (hellfire), Dutch hellevuur (hellfire), German Höllenfeuer (hellfire).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?h?l?fa??/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?h?l?fa???/

Noun

hellfire (countable and uncountable, plural hellfires)

  1. (uncountable) The fire of Hell.
  2. (uncountable) Fire produced by the Devil, or a similar supernatural creature connected to Hell.
  3. (countable) A fire that burns with unusual heat or ferocity.

Alternative forms

  • sometimes capitalized, hyphenated, or both: Hellfire, hell-fire, Hell-fire; also as fires of hell

Translations

Adjective

hellfire (comparative more hellfire, superlative most hellfire)

  1. Of or relating to a violent, apocalyptic and ultimate day of reckoning and judgment; usually characterizing a form of Christian preaching.
    • 1902, William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience, Lectures 4 & 5:
      The advance of liberalism, so-called, in Christianity, during the past fifty years, may fairly be called a victory of healthy-mindedness within the church over the morbidness with which the old hell-fire theology was more harmoniously related.
    • 2005, Sang Hyun Lee, The Princeton Companion to Jonathan Edwards (University of Princeton Press), p. 253:
      Sermons such as The Eternity of Hell Torments and The Future Punishment of the Wicked Unavoidable and Intolerable, as well as several manuscript examples, serve to mark the distinction between a true hellfire sermon and the proto-eschatological concerns of Sinners [in the Hands of an Angry God], consumed as it is with the here and now.

See also

  • fire and brimstone
  • purgatory

Interjection

hellfire

  1. hell; damn; blast

hellfire From the web:

  • what hellfire tastes like
  • hellfire meaning
  • what's hellfire in arabic
  • hellfire what does it means
  • guess what hellfire tastes like
  • what is hellfire club
  • what is hellfire about hunchback of notre dame
  • what is hellfire missile
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