Posted on 07/06/2009 9:06:36 AM PDT by Salvation
Featured Term (selected at random):
Appearances, especially those of bread and wine, after the Eucharistic consecration. The term "species" is used by the Council of Trent (Denzinger 1652) to identify the accidents, i.e., the size, weight, color, resistance, tase, and odor of bread, which remain exactly the same after transubstantiation. They are not mere appearances as though these physical properties were unreal. But they are appearances because after the consecration they lack any substance that underlies them or in which they inhere.
How fascinating — thanks for posting this.
Catholic Word of the Day not linked but you can do a search to find them.
Proclamation |
Consecration to the Sacred Heart |
Nominalism |
Rules of Conscience |
St. John Lateran |
Hermeneutics |
Doctrinal Universalism |
Good Friday |
Our Father |
Soul of the Church |
Latin Cross |
Book of Sentences |
Liber Pontificalis |
Paraclete |
People of God |
Bodily Resurrection |
Cardinal Electors |
Subsidiarity |
Striking the Breast |
Transfinalization |
Ordinary |
Titular Sees |
Wake |
Knowledge |
Polygenism |
Sede Vacante |
Peace Plate or Tablet |
Heroic Act |
Abbey Nullius |
Vulgate |
Founder |
Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples |
Vow |
Impassibility |
Vitandus |
Dedication of the Months |
Solemn Vows |
Species |
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Origin:
154555; < L speciēs appearance, form, sort, kind, equiv. to spec(ere) to look, regard + -iēs abstract n. suffix
We have spectacle, speculation, from the same Latin root.
Inspect would be another one.
How about circumspect?
I keep thinking of these words. LOL!
in+spect = look into
circum+spect = look around
re+spect = look back
pro+spect = look forward
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