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neology
[ nee-ol-uh-jee ]
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²Ô±ð·´Ç·±ô´Ç²µÂ·¾±Â·³¦²¹±ô [nee-, uh, -, loj, -i-k, uh, l], ²Ô±ðo·±ô´Ç²µî€ƒi³¦ adjective
- ²Ô±ðo·±ô´Ç²µî€ƒi·³¦²¹±ô·±ô²â adverb
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Example Sentences
In the first place, they describe only one side of the case; for, if there is much infidelity and neology on the continent, there is also a considerable sprinkling of true religion.Â
This offshoot of German neology, issuing from the same parent stock with Socinianism, finds a congenial soil in a Unitarian community.
The whiteness and crystalline form of saltpetre presented a sufficient analogy to attach to it a similar name, neology being in those days not quite so common or so easy as at present.
He had rather too keen a scent for what was termed neology.Â
For this was the age of Benthamism in social philosophy and "German neology" in biblical criticism.
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