godship

English

Etymology

From god + -ship.

Noun

godship (usually uncountable, plural godships)

  1. (humorous, with 'his', 'her', 'your', &c.) A term of address to a deity.
    • 1533, Thomas Heywood, The Play of the Wether, sig. Bii:
      Yf it please your gracyous godshyp.
    • 1994, Dustin Griffin, Satire, p. 86:
      The gods, addressed without ceremony in Juvenal as vos... become ‘Your Godships’.
  2. Synonym of divinity: the state, position, or fact of being a god.
    • 1592, Lancelot Andrewes, Wonderfull Combate, vi, f. 78v:
      Because there was a Godship, a higher degree than hers, she was not content.
    • 2003 August 4, New Yorker, p. 79:
      Emerson's vision of man coming into his godship through the conquest of nature reads suspiciously like an apology for westward expansion.

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.