What's the difference between trinitarian and triunity?

Trinitarian


Definition:

  • (n.) One who believes in the doctrine of the Trinity.
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to the Trinity, the doctrine of the Trinity, or believers in that doctrine.
  • (n.) One of a monastic order founded in Rome in 1198 by St. John of Matha, and an old French hermit, Felix of Valois, for the purpose of redeeming Christian captives from the Mohammedans.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) This means the new landscape of Stonehenge embodies modern Mammon's triumvirate of commoditisation, gambling and charity, just as it once did Trinitarian ideas of transcendence and immanence.
  • (2) The sin was so great that only his son (or God himself, depending on your Trinitarian theology) would do.
  • (3) We suggest that there is a trinitarian relationship between the meniscus, cartilage, and subchondral bone, in which structural changes in any one of the three causes secondary pathological adaptive changes in the other two.
  • (4) When she opens her door in Iowa City, a leafy college town where she teaches creative writing, the 65-year-old doesn't look agonised, or reclusive, or - an expectation raised by her enthusiasm for 18th-century theology and books with the word "Trinitarianism" in the title - in the Joyce Carol Oates school of brittle academics.

Triunity


Definition:

  • (n.) The quality or state of being triune; trinity.

Example Sentences:

Words possibly related to "trinitarian"