Orthodox
See also: orthodox
English
Adjective
Orthodox (comparative more Orthodox, superlative most Orthodox)
- (Christianity) Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Churches collectively.
- (Christianity, loosely) Of or pertaining to a particular Orthodox Church, usually the Eastern Orthodox Church, sometimes the Oriental Orthodox Church or the Church of the East.
- (Judaism) Of or pertaining to Orthodox Judaism.
- (Quakerism) Of or pertaining to the Orthodox Quakers, a group of Quakers (subdivided into the Wilburite, Gurneyite and Beaconite branches) who split with the Hicksite Quakers due to favoring adopting mainstream Protestant orthodoxy.
- 2006, Martha Paxson Grundy, The Evolution of a Quaker Community: Middletown Meeting, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, 1750-1850:
- [...which] Doherty hypothesized as the controlling variable for predicting who would become Orthodox or who would be Hicksite.
Derived terms
Translations
of the Orthodox Churches
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of Orthodox Judaism
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Noun
Orthodox (plural Orthodox or Orthodoxes)
- (uncommon) An Orthodox Christian.
- 1891, John Scott Keltie, The Statesman's Year-Book, MacMillan and Co., page 854:
- The Greek Orthodox population of the 62 bishoprics in 1886 numbered 65,549,096. to which the Orthodoxes of the army and navy must be added.
- 1984, David Gillard (ed.), British documents on foreign affairs: Reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print, Part I: From the mid-nineteenth century to the First World War, Series B: The Near and Middle East, 1856-1914, page 31.
- The Greek Catholic priesthood, who proselytize among the Orthodoxes, are specially favoured, and donations are given for Masses in the churches of the Capuchin and the Franciscan Friars.
- (rare) An Orthodox Jew.
Usage notes
Use of Orthodox as a noun is considerably less common than the use of Orthodox Jew and Orthodox Christian.
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