anthropomorphite, n. and a.
(-ˈmɔːfaɪt)
[ad. L. anthrōpomorphītæ (Aug.), a. Gr. ἀνθρωποµορϕῖται: see anthropomorphous and -ite.]
A. n. One ascribing (as an article of religious belief) a human form to God; spec. applied to a. A sect that arose in Egypt in the 4th century; b. A party in the Western Church in the 10th c.
| 1561 T. N[orton] Calvin's Inst. i. xiii. (1634) 43 The Anthropomorphites..which have imagined God to consist of a body. 1661 Origen's Opin. in Phœnix (1721) I. 8 Some unlearned Monks of Egypt..called by him [Origen] Anthropomorphites. 1872 O. Shipley Gloss. Eccl. Terms, Andæans..were Anthropomorphites, attributing to God a human form, parts, and passions. |
B. attrib. or as adj.; = anthropomorphitic.
| 1662 Glanvill Lux Orient. iv. (1682) 43 The dull and coarse Anthropomorphite Doctrines. 1798 W. Taylor in Month. Rev. XXV. 516 For a mythology to be adapted to the purposes of the artist, it suffices that the religion be anthropomorphite. |