Bardesanist

English

Etymology

Bardaisan + -ist

Noun

Bardesanist (plural Bardesanists)

  1. A follower of the teachings of Bardaisan; Bardaisanite.
    • 1967, John Rylands Library, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library - Volume 4, page 64:
      As a matter of fact these chapters coincide pretty closely with the Book of the Laws of Countries extant in Syriac and in part in Greek, written by an early Bardesanist ; and comparison shows that the Recognitions borrowed from the Bardesanist Book , not vice versâ ”
    • 1997, G. R. Mead, Fragments Of A Faith Forgotten, page 406:
      No doubt Bardaisan, or his son Harmonius, or whatever Bardesanist wrote the poem, was familiar with the great caravan route from India to Egypt, and used this knowledge as a substructure, but the whole is allegorical.

Adjective

Bardesanist (comparative more Bardesanist, superlative most Bardesanist)

  1. Pertaining to or influenced by Bardaisan; Bardaisanite.
    • 1967, John Rylands Library, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library - Volume 4, page 64:
      As a matter of fact these chapters coincide pretty closely with the Book of the Laws of Countries extant in Syriac and in part in Greek, written by an early Bardesanist ; and comparison shows that the Recognitions borrowed from the Bardesanist Book , not vice versâ ”
    • 1990, Tulio Maranhao, The Interpretation of Dialogue, page 299:
      Singing here, as if in harmonious unison, the voices of the self-discovered Cartesian cogito, the Freudian Narcissus, Lacan's mirrored ego, Satre's ego-in-the-look-of-the-other, and Piaget's egocentric child hymn and irenic other, Bardesanist bards minstreling the master narrative that governs physis, bios, and psyche, cosmos, civilization, and self in unending remugience.

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.