utter+anathemas
1anathematize — a•nath•e•ma•tize [[t]əˈnæθ ə məˌtaɪz[/t]] v. tized, tiz•ing 1) to utter an anathema against 2) to utter anathemas • Etymology: 1560–70; (< MF) < LL a•nath e•ma•ti•za′tion, n. a•nath′e•ma•tiz er, n …
2anathematize — I. v. a. Curse, maledict, denounce, imprecate, execrate, fulminate against, proscribe, ban, excommunicate. II. v. a. Curse, maledict, denounce, imprecate, execrate, fulminate against, proscribe, ban, excommunicate. III. v. n. Curse, utter… …
3a|nath´e|ma|tiz´er — a|nath|e|ma|tize «uh NATH uh muh tyz», verb, tized, tiz|ing. –v.t. to pronounce an anathema against; denounce; curse. –v.i. to utter anathemas; curse. –a|nath´e|ma|tiz´er, noun …
4a|nath|e|ma|tize — «uh NATH uh muh tyz», verb, tized, tiz|ing. –v.t. to pronounce an anathema against; denounce; curse. –v.i. to utter anathemas; curse. –a|nath´e|ma|tiz´er, noun …
5Apostasy in Christianity — Judas betrays Jesus with a kiss. Judas Iscariot, one of the Twelve Apostles, became an apostate.[1] Apostasy in Christianity refers to the rejection of Christianity by someone who formerly was a Christian. The term apostasy comes from the Greek… …
6Kol Nidre — (Aramaic: כל נדרי) is a Jewish prayer recited in the synagogue at the beginning of the evening service on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. It is written in Aramaic, not Hebrew. Its name is taken from the opening words, meaning All vows . Kol… …
7Clement IV — Pope Clement IV † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Pope Clement IV (GUIDO LE GROS). Born at Saint Gilles on the Rhone, 23 November, year unknown; elected at Perugia 5 February, 1265; d. at Viterbo, 29 November, 1268. After the death of… …
8Pope Clement IV — Pope Clement IV † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Pope Clement IV (GUIDO LE GROS). Born at Saint Gilles on the Rhone, 23 November, year unknown; elected at Perugia 5 February, 1265; d. at Viterbo, 29 November, 1268. After the death of… …
9com|mi|nate — «KOM uh nayt», verb, nat|ed, nat|ing. –v.t. to threaten; denounce; anathematize. –v.i. to utter threats or anathemas. ╂[< Latin comminārī (with English ate1) < …