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beatitude
[ bee-at-i-tood, -tyood ]
noun
- supreme blessedness; exalted happiness.
- (often initial capital letter) any of the declarations of blessedness pronounced by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount.
beatitude
1/ bɪˈætɪˌtjuːd /
noun
- supreme blessedness or happiness
- an honorific title of the Eastern Christian Church, applied to those of patriarchal rank
Beatitude
2/ bɪˈætɪˌtjuːd /
noun
- New Testament any of eight distinctive sayings of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:3–11) in which he declares that the poor, the meek, those that mourn, the merciful, the peacemakers, the pure of heart, those that thirst for justice, and those that are persecuted will, in various ways, receive the blessings of heaven
Word History and Origins
Origin of beatitude1
Word History and Origins
Origin of beatitude1
Example Sentences
“The church does not know of any means other than baptism that assures entry into eternal beatitude” — that is, heaven.
In the unrepentant shadows it’s hard to tell if he’s studying or mediating, but it’s still a beatitude of Blackness: color as signifier, color as artifact, color as stone cold fact.
After surgery, Price describes “a kind of stunned beatitude.”
There is no Dante in Beatrice’s beatitude, Hägglund writes, and no Beatrice in Dante’s beatitude.
It also supplies a backdrop of human folly to throw the beatitude of Adam and his robot kin into sharp relief.
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