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seraph
[ ser-uhf ]
noun
- one of the celestial beings hovering above God's throne in Isaiah's vision. Isaiah 6.
- a member of the highest order of angels, often represented as a child's head with wings above, below, and on each side.
seraph
/ ˈsɛrəf /
noun
- theol a member of the highest order of angels in the celestial hierarchies, often depicted as the winged head of a child
- Old Testament one of the fiery six-winged beings attendant upon Jehovah in Isaiah's vision (Isaiah 6)
Other Words From
- seraph·like adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of seraph1
Example Sentences
Supported by a flight of blue seraphim, God presides over an image of the entire world, which the artist has abstracted into concentric circles.
Foul-mouthed seraph Ashnikko first strikes viewers with her long blue pigtails and ethereal humanoid beauty.
He developed a style of writing that extended the seraphs of letters into arrows or dynamic vectors resembling missiles, rendering them all but illegible, except to the initiated.
If the museum becomes a mosque, the mosaics will have to be covered during Muslim prayers somehow, including seraphs high up at the base of the dome.
Her sister seraphim teach her that a woman without love is like an “angel without wings.”
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