1 |
VulgateLatin translation of the Bible, especially that completed in 405 by St. Jerome (c.340-420), c. 1600, from Medieval Latin Vulgata, from Late Latin vulgata "common, general, ordinary, popular" [..]
|
2 |
VulgateSaint Jerome's Latin anthologized compilation and translation of the Bible, prepared in the fourth century CE and used as the authorized version in Roman Catholic liturgical services up until Vat [..]
|
3 |
Vulgatea Latin version of both the Old and New Testaments, translated in the late 4th and early 5th centuries by St. Jerome at the request of Pope Damasus; it became the "official" Latin version of [..]
|
4 |
VulgateVulg.
|
5 |
Vulgatethe Latin version of the Bible. The influence which it exercised upon western Christianity is scarcely less than that of the LXX. upon the Greek churches. Both the Greek and the latin Vulgate have bee [..]
|
6 |
VulgateFrom the Latin vulgata, meaning "popular." A Latin translation of the Bible prepared in the 4th century by St. Jerome, which remained for centuries the version authorized by the Roman Cathol [..]
|
7 |
Vulgate(n) the Latin edition of the Bible translated from Hebrew and Greek mainly by St. Jerome at the end of the 4th century; as revised in 1592 it was adopted as the official text for the Roman Catholic Ch [..]
|
8 |
VulgateThe name given to the version of the Latin Bible translated by Jerome and recognized throughout the Middle Ages as the official Bible of the church (Soulen, Handbook of Biblical Criticism).
|
9 |
VulgateThe Latin version of the Bible translated by St Jerome from Hebrew and Greek at the end of the 4th century.
|
<< vulgarize | Vulpecula >> |