|
GODLINESS |
Piety |
|
PITY |
Piety. |
|
UNPITY |
Want of piety. |
|
YUPPIE |
Hurry up! Piety is too much for young professional |
|
|
PIOUS |
Of or pertaining to piety; exhibiting piety; reverential;
dutiful; religious; devout; godly. |
|
DEVOUT |
Expressing devotion or piety; as, eyes devout; sighs
devout; a devout posture. |
|
GRAVID |
Being with child; heavy with young; pregnant; fruitful; as,
a gravid uterus; gravid piety. |
|
IMPIETY |
The quality of being impious; want of piety; irreverence
toward the Supreme Being; ungodliness; wickedness. |
|
|
SANCTIFY |
To make efficient as the means of holiness; to render
productive of holiness or piety. |
|
UNFEIGNED |
Not feigned; not counterfeit; not hypocritical; real;
sincere; genuine; as, unfeigned piety; unfeigned love to man. |
|
STURDY |
Resolute, in a good sense; or firm, unyielding
quality; as, a man of sturdy piety or patriotism. |
|
IMPIOUS |
Not pious; wanting piety; irreligious; irreverent;
ungodly; profane; wanting in reverence for the Supreme Being; as, an
impious deed; impious language. |
|
METHODIST |
A person of strict piety; one who lives in the exact
observance of religious duties; -- sometimes so called in contempt or
ridicule. |
|
PHARISAISM |
Rigid observance of external forms of religion, without
genuine piety; hypocrisy in religion; a censorious, self-righteous
spirit in matters of morals or manners. |
|
SAINT |
A person sanctified; a holy or godly person; one eminent for
piety and virtue; any true Christian, as being redeemed and consecrated
to God. |
|
EFFLUX |
The act or process of flowing out, or issuing forth;
effusion; outflow; as, the efflux of matter from an ulcer; the efflux
of men's piety. |
|
WARMTH |
A state of lively and excited interest; zeal; ardor;
fervor; passion; enthusiasm; earnestness; as, the warmth of love or
piety; he replied with much warmth. |
|
RELIGIOUS |
A person bound by monastic vows, or sequestered from
secular concern, and devoted to a life of piety and religion; a monk or
friar; a nun. |
|
EMBODIMENT |
...n in a
physical body; a completely organized system, like the body; as, the
embodiment of courage, or of courtesy; the embodiment of true piety.... |
|
DEVOTE |
To give up wholly; to addict; to direct the attention of
wholly or compound; to attach; -- often with a reflexive pronoun; as,
to devote one's self to science, to one's friends, to piety, etc. |
|
WORLDLY-MINDED |
...ffairs of the present life, and forgetful of those of the future;
loving and pursuing this world's goods, to the exclusion of piety and
attentio... |
|
PIETIST |
...in the
17th century who sought to revive declining piety in the Protestant
churches; -- often applied as a term of reproach to those who make a
... |
|
HYPOCRITE |
...ter than he is; a false
pretender to virtue or piety; one who simulates virtue or piety. ... |
|
THEATINE |
...1524,
expressly to oppose Reformation, and to raise the tone of piety among
Roman Catholics. They hold no property, nor do they beg, but depend ... |
|
MONT DE PIETE |
...o poor people in need; -- called
also mount of piety. The institution has been adopted in other
countries, as in Spain and France. See Lombard-h... |