How poore, how narrow, how impious a measure of God, is this, that he must doe, as thou wouldest doe, if thou wert God. God's acre "burial ground" imitates or partially translates German Gottesacker, where the second element means "field " the phrase dates to 1610s in English but was noted as a Germanism as late as Longfellow. God squad "evangelical organization" is 1969 U.S. God-forbids was rhyming slang for kids ("children"). God of the gaps means "God considered solely as an explanation for anything not otherwise explained by science " the exact phrase is from 1949, but the words and the idea have been around since 1894. Gregory the Great, but the pagan Romans ( Absit omen) and Greeks had similar customs. God bless you after someone sneezes is credited to St. If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him. I want my lawyer, my tailor, my servants, even my wife to believe in God, because it means that I shall be cheated and robbed and cuckolded less often. It survives in English mainly in the personal names beginning in Os-. golly (interj.) euphemism for God, by 1775, in Gilbert Whites journal he refers to it as 'a sort of jolly kind of oath, or asseveration much in use among our carters, & the lowest people. A better word to translate deus might have been Proto-Germanic *ansuz, but this was used only of the highest deities in the Germanic religion, and not of foreign gods, and it was never used of the Christian God. Old English god probably was closer in sense to Latin numen. Originally a neuter noun in Germanic, the gender shifted to masculine after the coming of Christianity. Moreover, the notion of goodness is not conspicuous in the heathen conception of deity, and in good itself the ethical sense is comparatively late. Popular etymology has long derived God from good but a comparison of the forms. ![]() "Given the Greek facts, the Germanic form may have referred in the first instance to the spirit immanent in a burial mound". golly American Dictionary golly exclamation infml us / li / used to express surprise, or to emphasize what you are saying: 'He broke his arm and he’ll be out for weeks. ![]() Also God Old English god "supreme being, deity the Christian God image of a god godlike person," from Proto-Germanic *guthan (source also of Old Saxon, Old Frisian, Dutch god, Old High German got, German Gott, Old Norse guð, Gothic guþ), which is of uncertain origin perhaps from PIE *ghut- "that which is invoked" (source also of Old Church Slavonic zovo "to call," Sanskrit huta- "invoked," an epithet of Indra), from root *gheu(e)- "to call, invoke." The notion could be "divine entity summoned to a sacrifice."īut some trace it to PIE *ghu-to- "poured," from root *gheu- "to pour, pour a libation" (source of Greek khein "to pour," also in the phrase khute gaia "poured earth," referring to a burial mound see found (v.2)).
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