saecularis. <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span> m (oblique and nominative feminine singular seculere) secular (non-religious) worldly; mundane, non-celestial <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span> on the Anglo-Norman...
From Middle English secularelie, seculerli, <span class="searchmatch">seculerly</span>, equivalent to secular + -ly. secularly (comparative more secularly, superlative most secularly)...
Wikipedia fr sæculier (obsolete) From change of suffix from Old French <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span>, borrowed from Latin saeculāris (whence also séculaire, a later borrowing)...
Adverb: saeculāriter saeculārēs saeculāria Catalan: secular Old French: <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span> French: séculaire, séculier English: secular Galician: secular, segrar...
See also: sekulär From English secular, from Old French <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span>, from Latin saecularis (“of the age”), from saeculum. sekular (Jawi spelling سيکولر) secular...
See also: Secular sæcular (archaic) From Middle English <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span>, from Old French <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span>, from Latin saeculāris (“of the age”), from saeculum. (UK) IPA(key):...
Commonwealths: The gouernment of Hungarland was anciently spirituall & <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span>, the spiritualty was gouerned by the Arch-Byshop of Strigonium (who were...
→OCLC, book III, page 213, column 2: He had alſo ſet a prieſt of his and a <span class="searchmatch">ſeculer</span> ſeruaunt of his beſyde to by [buy] many of the ſame ſuyte [of books], &...
WOTD – 8 October 2024 From Late Middle English <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span> arm, <span class="searchmatch">seculer</span> arme (“civil authority or power”), a calque of Medieval Latin bracchium saeculāre (“(figurative)...
→OCLC, book III, page 213, column 2: He had alſo ſet a prieſt of his and a <span class="searchmatch">ſeculer</span> ſeruaunt of his beſyde to by [buy] many of the ſame ſuyte [of books], &...