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  1. 13 paź 2021 · religion. (n.) c. 1200, religioun, "state of life bound by monastic vows," also "action or conduct indicating a belief in a divine power and reverence for and desire to please it," from Anglo-French religiun (11c.), Old French religion, relegion "piety, devotion; religious community," and directly from Latin religionem (nominative religio ...

    • Religion

      c. 1200, religioun, "estado de vida sujeto a votos...

    • Italiano

      c. 1200, religioun, "stato di vita vincolato dai voti...

    • German

      ca. 1200, religioun, "Lebensform, die durch klösterliche...

    • Chinese

      religion 的起源與含義: 約1200年,...

    • Irreligion

      irreligion. (n.) "lack of religion, contempt of religion,...

    • Mysticism

      word-forming element making nouns implying a practice,...

    • Religate

      "bind together," 1590s from Latin religatus, past participle...

    • Religionless

      c. 1200, religioun, "state of life bound by monastic vows,"...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ReligioReligio - Wikipedia

    Newer research shows that in the ancient and medieval world, the etymological Latin root religio was understood as an individual virtue of worship in mundane contexts; never as doctrine, practice, or actual source of knowledge.

  3. 25 cze 2021 · religio-. word-forming element used from late 19c. with a sense of "religious, pertaining to religion, of religion and," from Latin religio "a religion; holiness" (see religion ). also from late 19c.

  4. 4 dni temu · Would the origins of the word itself take us any further? The Latin religio refers to the fear of God or the gods, and (much later) to the ceremonies and rites addressed to the gods.

  5. 12 sty 2017 · The etymological source of the term “religion”—which comes from the Latin noun religio (there isn’t really a precisely corresponding term in the Greek or Hebrew)—has been an ongoing subject of debate in the West since ancient times, and we’re still no closer to a resolution.

  6. 23 cze 2024 · religion ( countable and uncountable, plural religions) ( uncountable) Belief in a spiritual or metaphysical reality (often including at least one deity ), accompanied by practices or rituals pertaining to the belief. Synonym: faith. My brother tends to value religion, but my sister not as much.

  7. From Teutonic base rak, Aryan rag, the derivation may be traced through Middle High-German, Middle English of Chaucer's time, and Anglo-Saxon. In Mark 12, 14 we find Bu ne recst, Thou carest not. Our term religion is used also in the sense scrupulosity, conscientious scruple.

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