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ADMISSION |
Confession |
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EXTRACTS |
Gets (confession) |
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SHRIVING |
Shrift; confession. |
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GUTS |
They’re spilled during confession |
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CONFESSEDLY |
By confession; without denial. |
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CONFESSER |
One who makes a confession. |
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CONFESSARY |
One who makes a confession. |
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EARSHRIFT |
A nickname for auricular confession; shrift. |
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CONFESSIONAL |
Pertaining to a confession of faith. |
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SUBMISSION |
Acknowledgement of a fault; confession of error. |
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CONFESSIONALIST |
A priest hearing, or sitting to hear, confession. |
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RENDER |
To give an account; to make explanation or confession. |
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CONFESSIONARY |
Pertaining to auricular confession; as, a
confessionary litany. |
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ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
The act of acknowledging; admission; avowal;
owning; confession. |
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FORMULA |
A written confession of faith; a formal statement of
foctrines. |
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SHRIFT |
Confession made to a priest, and the absolution consequent
upon it. |
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SHRIVE |
To receive confessions, as a priest; to administer
confession and absolution. |
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CONFESS |
To hear or receive such confession; -- said of a
priest. |
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PENITENCER |
A priest who heard confession and enjoined penance in
extraordinary cases. |
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CONFITEOR |
A form of prayer in which public confession of sins is
made. |
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PECCAVI |
I have sinned; -- used colloquially to express confession or
acknowledgment of an offense. |
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AURICULAR |
Told in the ear, i. e., told privately; as, auricular
confession to the priest. |
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COGNIZANCE |
An acknowledgment of a fine of lands and tenements or
confession of a thing done. |
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INGENUOUS |
Free from reserve, disguise, equivocation, or
dissimulation; open; frank; as, an ingenuous man; an ingenuous
declaration, confession, etc. |
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CRIMINAL |
One who has commited a crime; especially, one who is
found guilty by verdict, confession, or proof; a malefactor; a felon. |