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Definitions

Vulgate

[vuhl-geyt, -git] / ˈvʌl geɪt, -gɪt /


Example Sentences

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In 410 the monk Jerome produced a version of the Christian Bible in Latin, the Vulgate, which was to be the main edition in Europe until the sixteenth century.

From Textbooks • Jan. 1, 2020

Many Catholic Scriptural exegetes now use Protestant spellings of Old Testament names rather than ones derived from the Vulgate.

From Time Magazine Archive

For Ronald, youngest and most celebrated of the four, it meant translating a Roman Catholic English Bible�Old and New Testaments�from the Latin Vulgate.

From Time Magazine Archive

In his version, the Vulgate, Jerome translated Keren, the Hebrew word for "ray, horn" as "cornuta," Latin for "horns."

From Time Magazine Archive

Pan Serafin did not know, so the priest took down the Vulgate and read an extract from Ecclesiastes.

From On the Field of Glory An Historical Novel of the Time of King John Sobieski by Sienkiewicz, Henryk