Word Meanings - UNCREATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To deprive of existence; to annihilate. Who can uncreate thee, thou shalt know. Milton.
Related words: (words related to UNCREATE)
- UNCREATED
1. Deprived of existence; annihilated. Beau. & Fl. 2. Not yet created; as, misery uncreated. Milton. 3. Not existing by creation; self-existent; eternal; as, God is an uncreated being. Locke. - DEPRIVEMENT
Deprivation. - UNCREATE
To deprive of existence; to annihilate. Who can uncreate thee, thou shalt know. Milton. - DEPRIVER
One who, or that which, deprives. - SHALT
2d per. sing. of Shall. - MILTONIAN
Miltonic. Lowell. - MILTONIC
Of, pertaining to, or resembling, Milton, or his writings; as, Miltonic prose. - ANNIHILATE
1. To reduce to nothing or nonexistence; to destroy the existence of; to cause to cease to be. It impossible for any body to be utterly annihilated. Bacon. 2. To destroy the form or peculiar distinctive properties of, so that the specific thing - DEPRIVE
1. To take away; to put an end; to destroy. 'Tis honor to deprive dishonored life. Shak. 2. To dispossess; to bereave; to divest; to hinder from possessing; to debar; to shut out from; -- with a remoter object, usually preceded by of. God hath - EXISTENCE
1. The state of existing or being; actual possession of being; continuance in being; as, the existence of body and of soul in union; the separate existence of the soul; immortal existence. The main object of our existence. Lubbock. 2. Continued - UNCREATEDNESS
The quality or state of being uncreated. - NONEXISTENCE
1. Absence of existence; the negation of being; nonentity. A. Baxter. 2. A thing that has no existence. Sir T. Browne. - SELF-ANNIHILATED
Annihilated by one's self. - PREEXISTENCE
1. Existence in a former state, or previous to something else. Wisdom declares her antiquity and preƫxistence to all the works of this earth. T. Burnet. 2. Existence of the soul before its union with the body; -- a doctrine held by certain - POSTEXISTENCE
Subsequent existence. - INEXISTENCE
Inherence; subsistence. Bp. Hall. That which exists within; a constituent. A. Tucker. - HAMILTON PERIOD
A subdivision of the Devonian system of America; -- so named from Hamilton, Madison Co., New York. It includes the Marcellus, Hamilton, and Genesee epochs or groups. See the Chart of Geology. - SELF-EXISTENCE
Inherent existence; existence possessed by virtue of a being's own nature, and independent of any other being or cause; -- an attribute peculiar to God. Blackmore. - COEXISTENCE
Existence at the same time with another; -- contemporary existence. Without the help, or so much as the coexistence, of any condition. Jer. Taylor. - INCOEXISTENCE
The state of not coexisting. Locke.