Associations to the word «Trinity»
Noun
- Wakefield
- Eton
- Dublin
- Wildcat
- Cambridge
- Harrow
- Episcopal
- Cantata
- Huddersfield
- Divinity
- Hartford
- Provost
- College
- Holy
- Brahma
- Evangelical
- Doctrine
- Curate
- Rector
- Incarnation
- Salford
- Leeds
- Dogma
- Atonement
- Rectory
- Churchyard
- Persons
- Wigan
- Homicide
- Orthodox
- Unitarian
- Coll
- Fg
- Repertory
- Church
- Marlborough
- Vicar
- Bradford
- Chapel
- Organist
- Yorkshire
- Wembley
- Harrisburg
- Ba
- Warrington
- Fellow
- Ob
- Commoner
- Cairns
- Kell
- Priory
- Baptism
- Triad
- Melbourne
- Theology
- Eucharist
- Sloane
- Apostles
- Lighthouse
- Anglican
- Tutor
- Westminster
- Leipzig
- Christ
- Lecturer
- Cathedral
- Nagasaki
- Antarctica
- Bach
- Creed
- Detonation
- Oxford
- Grammar
- Peninsula
- Buoy
- Parish
- Halifax
- Lent
- Mccarthy
- Archdeacon
- Guildford
- Christi
- Magdalen
Adjective
Verb
Wiktionary
TRINITY, noun. A group or set of three people or things; triad; trio; trine.
TRINITY, noun. The state of being three; threeness.
TRINITY, proper noun. (Christianity) In Christian belief, the three persons (personae) of the Godhead: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
TRINITY, proper noun. A female given name used since the 1970s, from the religious term trinity, or translated from its long-established Spanish equivalent.
TRINITY MONDAY, proper noun. The Monday which directly follows Trinity Sunday, and starts Trinitytide (the liturgical tide that lasts till Advent).
TRINITY SUNDAY, proper noun. The Sunday after Whitsunday/Pentecost in the Western Christian tradition (or the Sunday of Pentecost in the Eastern Christian tradition), observed as a liturgical feast in honor of the Holy Trinity.
Dictionary definition
TRINITY, noun. The cardinal number that is the sum of one and one and one.
TRINITY, noun. The union of the Father and Son and Holy Ghost in one Godhead.
TRINITY, noun. Three people considered as a unit.
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.