Bibliolatrical

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See also: bibliolatrical

English[edit]

Adjective[edit]

Bibliolatrical (comparative more Bibliolatrical, superlative most Bibliolatrical)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of bibliolatrical.
    • 1860, A[ugust] Tholuck, translated by R. Lundin Brown, Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount, Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, []; London: Hamilton, Adams, and Co.; Dublin: John Robertson, pages 135–136:
      Erasmus remarks concerning a Bibliolatrical application: neque laboratur de litterarum apiculis, cum constet non pauca etiam volumina V. T. (and so also of the New) intercidisse.
    • 1867 March 29, ““Liber Librorum.””, in The Pall Mall Gazette: An Evening Newspaper and Review, volume V, number 666, page 11, column 2:
      Compared to the ordinary run of “orthodox” and Bibliolatrical polemics, he is rational and charitable.
    • 1879 June 14, “Current Literature”, in The Academy: A Weekly Review of Literature, Science, and Art, volume XV, number 371, London: [] Robert Scott Walker, [], page 519, column 1:
      The volume is, in fact, Bibliolatrical rather than Shaksperian.
    • 1889, William Skinner, Jehovah Unveiled, or, The Character of the Jewish Deity Delineated: [], Boston: [] J. P. Mendum, page 32:
      [] the Word of God, and the extreme Protestant or Bibliolatrical theory finds its complete justification.
    • 1989, Fidelity, volume 9, Wanderer Forum Foundation, page 8, column 3:
      One is the distillation of the most degenerate kind of Bibliolatrical Protestantism, while the other is a borrowing from the liberal German-nationalistic strain in Continental Protestantism.