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redeemed
[ ri-deemd ]
adjective
- Theology. (in Christianity) having been saved or delivered from sin or its consequences:
Then shall all the redeemed saints appear in glory.
- having been paid, recovered, bought back, or exchanged for money or other goods:
Payments for the redeemed stock totaled $77 million at the end of the fiscal year.
Access codes purchased from other sellers carry a high risk of being either counterfeit or previously redeemed codes.
- having been discharged or fulfilled:
Read in this way, the book is the redeemed promise of a materialist critique of political economy.
- having made amends for or overcome some wrongdoing or fault:
In the end, having saved his young half-brother's life, he died a redeemed man.
noun
- Usually the redeemed. Theology. (in Christianity) those who have been saved or delivered from sin or its consequences:
We understand that all of us, even the redeemed, have a capacity for great evil.
verb
- the simple past tense and past participle of redeem.
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³Ü²Ô·°ù±ð·»å±ð±ð³¾±ð»å adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of redeemed1
Example Sentences
An element of violence was appropriate for an era torn apart by war, civil rights unrest and epic environmental degradation, but Goode redeemed the tumult through art.
Trump is redeemed through this myth that he's taking on imaginary villains far worse than he is, and therefore, supporters can believe they are redeemed for backing him.
Davis, though, redeemed himself with two free throws to ice the game, the Lakers winning their fourth in a row.
Mack redeemed himself — and gave the Bruins a 61-60 advantage with 33 seconds left — when he made a floater as he was fouled.
But Scarface redeemed himself later in the year by revealing his delightful Shrek phone cover, courtesy of his young daughter.
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