sublunar
101terrestrial — Synonyms and related words: Cynthian, Philistine, anagalactic, asteroidal, astral, astrologic, astrologistic, astrologous, astronomic, astrophysical, carnal, carnal minded, celestial, circumplanetary, cislunar, earth, earthbound, earthling,… …
102planetary — I (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Nomadic] Syn. vagrant, gypsy, restless; see traveling 2 , wandering 1 . 2. [Earthly] Syn. tellurian, terrestrial, sublunar, mundane; see worldly 1 , 2 . II (Roget s Thesaurus II) adjective So pervasive and all inclusive… …
103supralunar — adj. 2 g. Que está superior à Lua. ≠ SUBLUNAR ‣ Etimologia: supra + lunar …
104sublunary — a. Earthly, mundane, terrestrial, subastral, subcelestial, sublunar …
105temporal — adj 1. secular, nonspiritual, profane, nonreligious, secularistic, mundane; lay, laical, non clerical, nonecclesiastic, nonchurch; material, carnal, mortal; earthly, worldly, of this world, terrene, terrestrial, telluric, sublunar, sublunary. 2.… …
106sublunary — /sʌbˈlunəri/ (say sub loohnuhree) adjective 1. situated beneath the moon. 2. of, on, or being the earth; terrestrial. 3. mundane or worldly. Also, sublunar /sʌbˈlunə/ (say sub loohnuh) …
107sublunary — [sub lo͞on′ər ē, sub′lo͞o ner΄ē] adj. [ML sublunaris < L sub , under + luna, the moon] 1. situated beneath the moon; terrestrial 2. earthly; mundane: Also sublunar …
108ADAM — (אָדָם), the first man and progenitor of the human race. The Documentary Hypothesis distinguishes two conflicting stories about the making of man in Scripture (for a contrary view, see U. Cassuto, From Adam to Noah, pp. 71 ff.). In the first… …
109ALEXANDER OF APHRODISIAS° — (end of second century–beginning of third century C.E.), Greek philosopher, commentator on the writings of aristotle , and author of independent works. Alexander was important for his systematization of Aristotle s thought and for the formulation …
110FREE WILL — FREE WILL, a philosophic and theological notion referring initially to the observation that man is able to choose between a number of possible courses of action, becoming, through his choice, the cause of the action which he selects. Among… …