incorporeality
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Incorporeality — In cor*po re*al i*ty, n. The state or quality of being incorporeal or bodiless; immateriality; incorporealism. G. Eliot. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
incorporeality — index immateriality, impalpability Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Incorporeality — Incorporeal or uncarnate means without the nature of a body or substance. The idea of incorporeality refers to the notion that there is an incorporeal realm or place, that is distinct from the corporeal or material world. Incorporeal beings are… … Wikipedia
incorporeality — noun The state or characteristic of being incorporeal. Gods immateriality entails the divine attribute of incorporeality, that God is neither a body nor embodied. Syn: disembodiedness, incorporeity … Wiktionary
incorporeality — Synonyms and related words: airiness, airy nothing, bodilessness, ethereality, fineness, flimsiness, ghostliness, immateriality, immaterialness, impalpability, imponderability, incorporeity, inextension, insolidity, insubstantiality,… … Moby Thesaurus
incorporeality — n. state of being immaterial; condition of having no body or form … English contemporary dictionary
incorporeality — in·corporeality … English syllables
incorporeality — noun the quality of not being physical; not consisting of matter • Syn: ↑immateriality • Ant: ↑corporeality, ↑materiality (for: ↑immateriality) • Derivationally related forms: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
incorporeal — incorporeality, n. incorporeally, adv. /in kawr pawr ee euhl, pohr /, adj. 1. not corporeal or material; insubstantial. 2. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of nonmaterial beings. 3. Law. without material existence but existing in… … Universalium
MAIMONIDES, MOSES — (Moses ben Maimon; known in rabbinical literature as Rambam ; from the acronym Rabbi Moses Ben Maimon; 1135–1204), rabbinic authority, codifier, philosopher, and royal physician. BIOGRAPHY The most illustrious figure in Judaism in the post… … Encyclopedia of Judaism