释义 |
Definition of consubstantial in English: consubstantialadjective kɒnsəbˈstanʃ(ə)lˌkɑnsəbˈstæn(t)ʃ(ə)l Of the same substance or essence (used especially of the three persons of the Trinity in Christian theology) 同质的;同体的;(尤用于基督教神学中的圣父、圣子、圣灵三位)一体的 Christ is consubstantial with the Father 耶稣基督和圣父是一体的。 Example sentencesExamples - This system works with patterns that connect particular human groups with particular non-human species, generating interspecies consubstantial kindreds.
- The consubstantial kindreds known as totemic groups include both human and non-human kin.
- The Word was with God, that is, in the unique equality of the divine; for this Word that is with God is equal to him in divinity, since the Word that is in God is inseparable from God and consubstantial with him.
- The pragmatic differentiation between classificatory, potential and actual affines is undertaken in accordance with the proscriptive principles described above, and is framed within a consubstantial conception of relatedness.
- Newton and Locke, on the other hand, leant towards the anti-Trinitarian heresy of Arius of Alexandria that denied Christ and God were consubstantial.
- To utilize power in the corruption of life is to deem oneself a demigod, to remove oneself from the nurturing fluids of consubstantial human interaction.
- Effective physician-patient communication is consubstantial to high-quality health care and to patient well-being.
- Presumably, this is because rhythm is an aspect of becoming, because it marks the in-between and connects heterogeneities, not because it is consubstantial with the homogeneous space-time of a territory.
- Performing and remembering are consubstantial in this text.
- Nonetheless, it remains that these domains are fundamentally consubstantial and coextensive.
- ‘Will you then,’ he addresses his opponents, ‘give up your contention against the Spirit, that He must be altogether begotten, or else cannot be consubstantial, or God?’
- In the wake of institutional approaches, it is the consubstantial interdependence between theory and reality that researchers seek to assess that is at the heart of the innovative milieus approach.
- The descent into the Etruscan tombs must have let him feel he was commingling with his father, father and son consubstantial.
- He referred not so much to architectural form as to dedication of three altars in one church as symbolising the three persons in the consubstantial unity of God.
- Basically, the tactics of appeal play with the idea of an identity of contexts, which induces an identity of the subjects themselves within the contexts and, indeed, renders them consubstantial.
- Thus, the rhetor ‘is both joined and separate, at once a distinct substance and consubstantial with another’.
- Could there be a more humbling realization than that one is consubstantial with one's enemy, or that one is indebted to one's enemy?
- Among these patterns are those that cross-cut human and other species, creating the consubstantial kindreds known as totemic groups.
- They both based the production of their wide-ranging sociological surveys on the notion that cultural process, forms of power and disciplines of corporeality are consubstantial phenomena.
- The earliest experts to promote tea culture were monks, thus ‘Tea and Zen are consubstantial,’ Xu said.
OriginLate Middle English: from ecclesiastical Latin consubstantialis (translating Greek homoousios 'of one substance'), from con- 'with' + substantialis (see substantial). Definition of consubstantial in US English: consubstantialadjectiveˌkɑnsəbˈstæn(t)ʃ(ə)lˌkänsəbˈstan(t)SH(ə)l Of the same substance or essence (used especially of the three persons of the Trinity in Christian theology) 同质的;同体的;(尤用于基督教神学中的圣父、圣子、圣灵三位)一体的 Christ is consubstantial with the Father 耶稣基督和圣父是一体的。 Example sentencesExamples - Newton and Locke, on the other hand, leant towards the anti-Trinitarian heresy of Arius of Alexandria that denied Christ and God were consubstantial.
- He referred not so much to architectural form as to dedication of three altars in one church as symbolising the three persons in the consubstantial unity of God.
- Could there be a more humbling realization than that one is consubstantial with one's enemy, or that one is indebted to one's enemy?
- This system works with patterns that connect particular human groups with particular non-human species, generating interspecies consubstantial kindreds.
- The descent into the Etruscan tombs must have let him feel he was commingling with his father, father and son consubstantial.
- Presumably, this is because rhythm is an aspect of becoming, because it marks the in-between and connects heterogeneities, not because it is consubstantial with the homogeneous space-time of a territory.
- Nonetheless, it remains that these domains are fundamentally consubstantial and coextensive.
- The Word was with God, that is, in the unique equality of the divine; for this Word that is with God is equal to him in divinity, since the Word that is in God is inseparable from God and consubstantial with him.
- The consubstantial kindreds known as totemic groups include both human and non-human kin.
- The pragmatic differentiation between classificatory, potential and actual affines is undertaken in accordance with the proscriptive principles described above, and is framed within a consubstantial conception of relatedness.
- ‘Will you then,’ he addresses his opponents, ‘give up your contention against the Spirit, that He must be altogether begotten, or else cannot be consubstantial, or God?’
- In the wake of institutional approaches, it is the consubstantial interdependence between theory and reality that researchers seek to assess that is at the heart of the innovative milieus approach.
- Effective physician-patient communication is consubstantial to high-quality health care and to patient well-being.
- Thus, the rhetor ‘is both joined and separate, at once a distinct substance and consubstantial with another’.
- Among these patterns are those that cross-cut human and other species, creating the consubstantial kindreds known as totemic groups.
- They both based the production of their wide-ranging sociological surveys on the notion that cultural process, forms of power and disciplines of corporeality are consubstantial phenomena.
- Basically, the tactics of appeal play with the idea of an identity of contexts, which induces an identity of the subjects themselves within the contexts and, indeed, renders them consubstantial.
- To utilize power in the corruption of life is to deem oneself a demigod, to remove oneself from the nurturing fluids of consubstantial human interaction.
- The earliest experts to promote tea culture were monks, thus ‘Tea and Zen are consubstantial,’ Xu said.
- Performing and remembering are consubstantial in this text.
OriginLate Middle English: from ecclesiastical Latin consubstantialis (translating Greek homoousios ‘of one substance’), from con- ‘with’ + substantialis (see substantial). |