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allperfect. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
allperfect, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
allperfect in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Alternative forms
Etymology
all- + perfect
Pronunciation
Adjective
allperfect (not comparable)
- (archaic) Wholly perfect.
1749, [John Cleland], “(Please specify the letter or volume)”, in Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure [Fanny Hill], London: G. Fenton , →OCLC:Oh! could I paint his figure as I see it now, still present to my transported imagination! a whole length of an allperfect, manly beauty in full view.
1804, Maximus (of Tyre), The Dissertations of Maximus Tyrius, Volume 1, C. Whittingham, page 228:For such is the natural order of things that externally proceeding should be suspended from inward energy, the whole world from the allperfect monad of ideas, and the parts of the visible universe from monads which are separated from each other.
1907, The Lutheran Church Review, Volume 26, Alumni Association of the Lutheran Theological Seminary, →ISBN, page 228:So delicate and difficult are the questions here involved, that we could come to no solution of them had we not an allperfect teaching in regard to them, made luminous by an allperfect exaniple; had not the Church Christ to teach her, and Christ to go before her, and apply in his own marvellous life his own matchless instructions.