Vulgate bible
Vulgate Bible [(vul-gayt)]
A Latin translation of the Bible made by the scholar Jerome, a saint of the Roman Catholic Church, in the fourth century. This translation was the standard Bible of the Western world until the Reformation. Vulgate comes from a Latin word meaning “common,” because Jerome’s translation used the Latin of everyday speech.
Read Also:
- Vulgus
noun, plural vulguses for 2. 1. the common people; masses. 2. an exercise in Latin formerly required of English public-school pupils. ad captandum vulgus [ahd kahp-tahn-doo m woo l-goo s; English ad kap-tan-duh m vuhl-guh s] /ɑd kɑpˈtɑn dʊm ˈwʊl gʊs; English æd kæpˈtæn dəm ˈvʌl gəs/ Latin. 1. in order to please the mob.
- Vulned
adjective, Heraldry. 1. (of an animal or man) represented as wounded.
- Vulnerabilities
adjective 1. capable of or susceptible to being wounded or hurt, as by a weapon: a vulnerable part of the body. 2. open to moral attack, criticism, temptation, etc.: an argument vulnerable to refutation; He is vulnerable to bribery. 3. (of a place) open to assault; difficult to defend: a vulnerable bridge. 4. Bridge. having […]
- Vulnerability
adjective 1. capable of or susceptible to being wounded or hurt, as by a weapon: a vulnerable part of the body. 2. open to moral attack, criticism, temptation, etc.: an argument vulnerable to refutation; He is vulnerable to bribery. 3. (of a place) open to assault; difficult to defend: a vulnerable bridge. 4. Bridge. having […]
- Vulnerable
adjective 1. capable of or susceptible to being wounded or hurt, as by a weapon: a vulnerable part of the body. 2. open to moral attack, criticism, temptation, etc.: an argument vulnerable to refutation; He is vulnerable to bribery. 3. (of a place) open to assault; difficult to defend: a vulnerable bridge. 4. Bridge. having […]