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apocalyptic
[ uh-pok-uh-lip-tik ]
adjective
- of or like an apocalypse; affording a revelation or prophecy.
- pertaining to the Apocalypse or biblical book of Revelation.
- predicting or presaging imminent disaster and total or universal destruction:
the apocalyptic vision of some contemporary writers.
Other Words From
- a·poca·lypti·cal·ly adverb
- posta·poca·lyptic adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of apocalyptic1
Example Sentences
And it merely delayed the apocalyptic maelstrom that followed rather than preventing it.
At DoD he ran around with his hair practically on fire denouncing cuts to the defense budget in out-sized, apocalyptic terms.
And I also have lots of apocalyptic dreams, including warfare.
Off the coast of Japan stands a crumbling, post-apocalyptic abandoned island that once held a bustling mining community.
Failure to reach an accord will add yet more potentially apocalyptic uncertainties to the Middle Eastern scene.
It was poetry and the drama, and processions and apocalyptic visions.
She flashed before him, an Apocalyptic angel, splended and terrible, trumpet-calling him to the last great fight.
Similarly, the apocalyptic myth of world-destruction has passed beyond the stage of the myth proper.
In Jewish literature, one of the earliest examples of such apocalyptic accounts of the beyond is to be found in the Book of Enoch.
The apocalyptic hope is the end of Old Testament prophecy, but not its height.
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