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sanhedrim
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sanhedrist
sanhedrist (ˈsænɪdrɪst) Also 6 sanedrist. [f. sanhedrim) + -ist.] A member of the Sanhedrim; also fig.1593 G. Harvey Pierce's Super. Wks. (Grosart) II. 179 Me thinkes the wisest Sanedrist of a thousand, should hardly persuad me, that he is a frend of Princes, and no enemie of Monarchies. 1879 Farrar...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Ruth 4
judicature were usually held, to properly judge the case he had, thus the Targum states, "and Boaz went up to the gate of the house of judgment of the sanhedrim
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Ronald Gurner
Sayers in her Introduction to The Man Born to Be King for "its imaginative treatment of the whole situation from the point of view of the Sanhedrim."
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sanhedrin
sanhedrim, sanhedrin Jewish Antiq. (ˈsænɪdrɪm, -ɪn) Also 6–7 sanedrim, 7 -in. [a. late Heb. sanhedrīn, a. Gr. συνέδριον council, lit. ‘sitting together’, f. σύν together + ἕδρα seat. The incorrect form sanhedrim, which has always been in England (from the 17th c.) the only form in popular use, seems...
Oxford English Dictionary
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synedrium
‖ synedrion, synedrium (sɪˈnɛdrɪən), (-əm) Pl. synedria. Also 8 synhed-; 7 anglicized pl. synedries; 8 in forms assimilated to sanhedrim, synhedrim, synedrin. [mod.L., a. Gr. συνέδριον, f. σύνεδρος: see next.] A judicial or representative assembly, a council, consistory; spec. the Jewish sanhedrim.1...
Oxford English Dictionary
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synedrian
synedrian, n. and a. (sɪˈnɛdrɪən) [f. next + -an.] a. n. A member of a synedrion; see also quot. 1606. b. adj. Of or belonging to a synedrion.1606 T. Whetenhall Disc. Abuses Ch. Christ 119 [They] call them that desire to have restored againe the auncient order of Parish Synedries, Consistories, or P...
Oxford English Dictionary
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semicha
semicha Judaism. (sɛˈmiːxə) Also semichah, semikhah, and with capital initial. [Heb. s⊇mīkhāh, lit. leaning.] The laying-on of hands by which a rabbi is ordained; the ordination of a rabbi. Also, a diploma of rabbinical ordination. The laying-on of hands, practised only in antiquity, was later repla...
Oxford English Dictionary
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prejudge
prejudge, v. (priːˈdʒʌdʒ) [ad. F. préjuger (16th c. in Littré), after L. præjūdicāre to prejudge, prejudicate: see pre- A. 1 and judge v.] 1. trans. To pass judgement, or pronounce sentence on, before trial, or without proper inquiry; hence, to judge, to express or come to a judgement or decision up...
Oxford English Dictionary
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bencher
bencher (ˈbɛnʃə(r)) [f. bench n. + -er1.] 1. One who sits on a bench (or thwart); one who frequents the benches of a tavern.1534 Ld. Berners Gold. Bk. M. Aurel. (1546) D d viij, If the pyllers bee of syluer, and benches of golde, and though the benchers be kynges. 1598 B. Jonson Ev. Man in Hum. iv. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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supersedeas
‖ supersedeas (s(j)uːpəˈsiːdɪæs) Also 5 -sidias, 5–7 -sedias, 6 -sedyas, -sideas, 7 -sedæas, -sedies. [L., = you shall desist, 2nd pers. sing. pres. subj. of supersedēre to supersede.] 1. Law. A writ commanding the stay of legal proceedings which ought otherwise to have proceeded, or suspending the ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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presbyter
presbyter (ˈprɛs-, ˈprɛzbɪtə(r)) Also 6 presbiter. [a. late L. presbyter (Tertullian), ad. Gr. πρεσβύτερος, in N.T. an elder of the Jewish council or Sanhedrim, an elder of the apostolic church; prop. adj. ‘older, elder’, compar. of πρέσβυς an old man. So F. presbytre. The Vulgate regularly renders ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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synagogue
synagogue (ˈsɪnəgɒg) Forms: 2–6 sinagoge, 3–6 sinagog, synagog(e, (4 sinnagog), 4–7 sinagogue, (5 synagod), 5–6 synagogge, (6 synagoog, 8 sinegogg, senegog), 3– synagogue, (U.S.) synagog. [a. OF. sinagoge (11th c.), mod.F. synagogue, or ad. its source late L. synagōga, a. Gr. συναγωγή meeting, assem...
Oxford English Dictionary
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conclave
conclave (ˈkɒnkleɪv) Also 8 -cleave. [a. F. conclave:—L. conclāve, pl. conclāvia, a place that may be locked up, f. con- together + clāvis key.] † 1. A private room, inner chamber, closet. Obs.a 1400 Cov. Myst. 15 Pylat sendyth iiii knytes..To keep the blody body in his dede conclave. 1560 Rolland C...
Oxford English Dictionary
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