medieveal
English
Adjective
medieveal (comparative more medieveal, superlative most medieveal)
- Alternative form of medieval
- 1981, Herman Parret, Jef Verschueren, Marina Sbisà, editors, Possibilities and Limitations of Pragmatics, page 311:
- This reminds one somehow of the Medieveal theory of the division between a sublunary and a superlunary world.
- 1989, Harold Coward, Julius Lipner, Katherine K. Young, Hindu Ethics, SUNY Press, →ISBN, page 12:
- Further exemplification of Patanjali's position will be found in the disciplines followed by Gorakhnäth and his followers, the Kan-phata Yogis, during the medieveal period.
- 2007 August 13, Dov M. Gabbay, John Woods, The Many Valued and Nonmonotonic Turn in Logic, Elsevier, →ISBN, page 188:
- Medieveal logicians often did the same — in Latin.
- 2010 May 17, DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Switzerland, DK Publishing, →ISBN, page 162:
- Highlights here include artefacts from Switzerland's rich archaeological past and a medieveal treasury.
- 2010 November 18, “The Enchanting Heavens”, in Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, Attila Grandpierre, editors, Astronomy and Civilization in the New Enlightenment, Springer Netherlands, →ISBN, page 61:
- From the astral theology of Mesopotamia to Medieveal Christianity, the celestial realm had been associated with the divine.
- 2011 July, Guido Rossi, Cultures, Communities and Conflicts in the Medieveal Mediterranean, University of Edinburgh:
- (title)
- 2016 June 14, “Cartesian Soul” (chapter 3), in Aaron Massecar, Charlene Elsby, editors, Essays on Aesthetic Genesis, →ISBN, page 60:
- If, as we have argued, the core crisis which still haunts philosophy generally and phenomenology more specifically is that of late Medieveal Nominalist Voluntarism, […]
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