unitive

Français

Forme d’adjectif

Singulier Pluriel
Masculin unitif
\y.ni.tif\

unitifs
\y.ni.tif\
Féminin unitive
\y.ni.tiv\
unitives
\y.ni.tiv\

unitive \y.ni.tiv\

  1. Féminin singulier de unitif.

Anglais

Étymologie

Du latin unitivus.

Adjectif

Nature Forme
Positif unitive
Comparatif more unitive
Superlatif most unitive

unitive \ˈjuː.nɪ.tɪv\

  1. Unitif.
    • The mystics’ fundamental vision was unitive: all things, including sinful creatures, are united with God.  (Jeffrey Burton Russell, Lucifer, the Devil in the Middle Ages, page 290, 1986)
    • Starting with this principle, established by God, namely that sex must always be the expression of a love that is unitive (till death) and procreative (opened to life), we can arrive at a simple Sexual Ethics primer.  (Albert Joseph Mary Shamon, Firepower Through Confirmation, page 13, 2003)
    • It was unitive in that it directly asked each person to go beyond that which separates him or her from other people.  (David Gershon, Social change 2.0: a blueprint for reinventing our world, 2009)

Prononciation

  • \ˈjuː.nɪ.tɪv\
  • États-Unis (Californie du Nord) : écouter « unitive [Prononciation ?] »

Références

  • Cet article utilise des informations de l’article du Wiktionnaire en anglais, sous licence CC-BY-SA-3.0 : unitive.
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