unitive
Français
Anglais
Étymologie
- Du latin unitivus.
Adjectif
Nature | Forme |
---|---|
Positif | unitive |
Comparatif | more unitive |
Superlatif | most unitive |
unitive \ˈjuː.nɪ.tɪv\
- 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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