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ConsecrateConsecrate Con"se*crate, a. [L. consceratus, p. p. of
conscerare to conscerate; con- + sacrare to consecrate, sacer
sacred. See Sacred.]
Consecrated; devoted; dedicated; sacred.
They were assembled in that consecrate place. --Bacon. Consecrater
Consecrater Con"se*cra`ter, n.
Consecrator.
consecraterConsecrator Con"se*cra`tor, n. [L.]
One who consecrates; one who performs the rites by which a
person or thing is devoted or dedicated to sacred purposes.
[Written also consecrater.] ConsecratorConsecrator Con"se*cra`tor, n. [L.]
One who consecrates; one who performs the rites by which a
person or thing is devoted or dedicated to sacred purposes.
[Written also consecrater.] Consecratory
Consecratory Con"se*cra*to*ry (? or ?), a.
Of or pertaining to the act of consecration; dedicatory.
The consecratory prayer. --Bp. Burnet.
Consectaneous
Consectaneous Con`sec*ta"ne*ous, a. [L. consectaneus.]
Following as a matter of course. --Blount.
Consectary
Consectary Con"sec*ta*ry, a. [L. consectarius, fr. consectari
to follow after eagerly; con- + sectari to follow eagerly,
fr. sequi to follow.]
Following by consequence; consequent; deducible. [R.]
``Consectary impieties.' --Sir T. Browne.
Consectary
Consectary Con"sec*ta*ry, n.
That which follows by consequence or is logically deducible;
deduction from premises; corollary. [R.] --Milton.
Consecute
Consecute Con"se*cute, v. t.
To follow closely; to endeavor to overtake; to pursue. [Obs.]
--Bp. Burnet.
ConsecutionConsecution Con`se*cu"tion, n. [L. consecutio. See
Consequent.]
1. A following, or sequel; actual or logical dependence.
--Sir M. Hale.
2. A succession or series of any kind. [Obs.] --Sir I.
Newton.
Month of consecution (Astron.), a month as reckoned from
one conjunction of the moon with the sun to another. Consecutively
Consecutively Con*sec"u*tive*ly, adv.
In a consecutive manner; by way of sequence; successively.
Consecutiveness
Consecutiveness Con*sec"u*tive*ness, n.
The state or quality of being consecutive.
DeconsecrateDeconsecrate De*con"se*crate, v. t.
To deprive of sacredness; to secularize. --
De*con`se*cra"tion, n. DeconsecrationDeconsecrate De*con"se*crate, v. t.
To deprive of sacredness; to secularize. --
De*con`se*cra"tion, n. Disconsecrate
Disconsecrate Dis*con"se*crate, v. t.
To deprive of consecration or sacredness. [R.]
Inconsecutiveness
Inconsecutiveness In`con*sec"u*tive*ness, n.
The state or quality of not being consecutive. --J. H.
Newman.
Misconsecrate
Misconsecrate Mis*con"se*crate, v. t.
To consecrate amiss. ``Misconsecrated flags.' --Bp. Hall.
Misconsecration
Misconsecration Mis*con`se*cra"tion, n.
Wrong consecration.
Month of consecutionConsecution Con`se*cu"tion, n. [L. consecutio. See
Consequent.]
1. A following, or sequel; actual or logical dependence.
--Sir M. Hale.
2. A succession or series of any kind. [Obs.] --Sir I.
Newton.
Month of consecution (Astron.), a month as reckoned from
one conjunction of the moon with the sun to another. Reconsecrate
Reconsecrate Re*con"se*crate (-k?n"s?*kr?t), v. t.
To consecrate anew or again.
Reconsecration
Reconsecration Re*con`se*cra"tion, n.
Renewed consecration.
Unconsecrate
Unconsecrate Un*con"se*crate, v. t. [1st pref. un- +
consecrate.]
To render not sacred; to deprive of sanctity; to desecrate.
[Obs.]
Meaning of ConSec from wikipedia
- "scanners" are
psychics with
unusual telepathic and
telekinetic powers.
ConSec, a
purveyor of
weaponry and
security systems,
searches out
scanners to use...
- 1-15 (
consec) and
attached railings (1394848)".
National Heritage List for England.
Retrieved 3
April 2015.
Historic England. "Nos 1-12 (
consec) and attached...
- to 7 (
consec) 12.6.50. Nos 8 to 10 (
consec), 10A & 12.6.50. ll to 20 (
consec) 14.7.55. No 21 12.6.50 Nos 22 to 3O (
consec) Nos 31 to 34 (
consec) 12.6...
-
Crimson Tide
Tuscaloosa AL 38,316
SEC SIAA, So
Con 1892
Appalachian State Mountaineers Boone NC 20,641 Sun Belt NSC, So
Con 1928 2014 1974 1981
Arizona Wildcats...
- ISBNÂ 978-0-300-07207-5. "Nos 1 to 7 (
consec), Nos 8 to 10 (
consec), 10A, ll to 20 (
consec), No 21, Nos 22 to 3O (
consec), Nos 31 to 34 (
consec), Nos 35 & 36, No 37 and...
- (
consec) **** Street".
Images of England.
English Heritage.
Archived from the
original on 17
October 2012.
Retrieved 26 July 2009. "Nos 2 to 17 (
consec)...
- born with
uncontrollable psychic abilities. The
private military company ConSec tries to
recruit and
weaponize them to stop a
malevolent ring led by a Scanner...
- [citation needed]
Outside Canada, Del
Grande is
probably best
known as the
ConSec scanner in the
infamous "head explosion"
scene in the
David Cronenberg movie...
- (1983, 1984) New York Jets Ring of
Honor New York Jets All-Time Four
Decade Team NFL
record Consec.
seasons leading NFL in sacks: 2
Career NFL statistics...
- and
North East
Somerset "No 1 Nos 2 and 3 (The
Halcyon Hotel) Nos 4 to 8 (
consec) (Pratt's Hotel)".
Images of England.
English Heritage.
Archived from the...