Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. uk / əˈnæθ.ə.mə / us / əˈnæθ.ə.mə / Add to word list. something that is strongly disliked or disapproved of: Credit controls are anathema to the government. For older employees, the new system is an anathema. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Feelings of dislike and hatred. abhorrence. abomination. animosity. animus. anti-Catholicism.

    • Traditional

      ANATHEMA translate: 令人討厭的事物. Learn more in the Cambridge...

    • Anathema in Spanish

      anathema translate: Anatema. Learn more in the Cambridge...

  3. The meaning of ANATHEMA is someone or something intensely disliked or loathedusually used as a predicate nominative. How to use anathema in a sentence. Word History of Anathema

  4. us / əˈnæθ.ə.mə / uk / əˈnæθ.ə.mə / Add to word list. something that is strongly disliked or disapproved of: Credit controls are anathema to the government. For older employees, the new system is an anathema. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Feelings of dislike and hatred. abhorrence. abomination. animosity. animus. anti-Catholicism.

  5. Overview. anathema. Quick Reference. The word means ‘separated’ or ‘accursed’. In the OT it was used of ‘things devoted to God’, that is not for common use; later when applied to people it came to involve exclusion from the community and loss of goods. St Paul used it of separation from the Christian community.

  6. The word is often used to describe an object, idea, or person that is abhorrent or loathsome. Anathema can be seen as a form of rejection, an expression of strong disapproval, or a condemnation of a particular thing or person.

  7. Definition of anathema noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Aug 20, 2022 · 1 Derived from late Latin anathema ‘an excommunicated person’ and Gk ἀνάθεμα originally ‘a thing devoted’, but in later usage ‘a thing devoted to evil, an accursed thing’, it came into English in the 16c. initially in the broad sense ‘the formal act, or formula, of consigning to damnation’.

  1. People also search for