"supercelestially" meaning in English

See supercelestially in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Adverb

Forms: more supercelestially [comparative], most supercelestially [superlative]
Etymology: From supercelestial + -ly. Etymology templates: {{suffix|en|supercelestial|-ly|id2=adverbial}} supercelestial + -ly Head templates: {{en-adv}} supercelestially (comparative more supercelestially, superlative most supercelestially)
  1. In a supercelestial way.
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          "ref": "1817, Robert Robinson, The History of Baptism, Lincoln & Edmands, pages 349-350:",
          "text": "What can seem less connected with baptism than the episcopal ring? Remove back to the ages of allegory, and it will be found that the bishop, like Saint Paul, was animated with a godly jealousy to espouse the church as a chaste virgin to Christ: for as St. Jerom most supercelestially describes him, the bishop is the organ of the omnipotence of Christ (8).",
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          "ref": "1992, Robert Robinson, The History of Baptism, Crossroad Publishing Company, pages 133-134:",
          "text": "[...] the science and knowledge of God, as well as of the separated substances, of the spiritual world, and of its secrets. Such knowledge cannot be acquired by exterior senses, nor by experience, reason, demonstration, syllogism, study or any other human and logical means, but only by faith, by illumination and celestial revelation which moves the free will to believe that which is inspired and to know the aforesaid secrets by the holy and written law of God and also by the figures, names, numbers, symbols, and other ways divinely and supercelestially given and revealed to the fathers, patriarchs, prophets, and doctors of the Hebrews on the divine law.",
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          "ref": "2010, Jim Egan, The Meaning of The Monas Hieroglyphica with Regards to Geometry, Cosmopolite Press, page 6:",
          "text": "But beyond Dee’s awareness if the cultural currents on the continent, Dee thought globally - he coined the phrase “The British Empire.” Beyond the globe, Dee thought Celestially - he had studied movements of the Sun, Moon, planets, and stars. But even beyond that, he thought “Supercelestially.” I say that because he studied numbers. In the Preface to Euclid, Dee describes numbers as being part “supernatural” and part “natural.”",
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          "ref": "2016, Andrew Cunningham, Roger French, Before Science: The Invention of the Friars' Natural Philosophy, Ashgate Publishing, Routledge, →ISBN Invalid ISBN, page 107:",
          "text": "There is a Monad, states Alain’s first rule. Supercelestially there is unity, subcelestially, plurality. The Monad as Unity produces another, Equality; the union of Unity and Equality constitutes the Third Person of the Trinity. God is alpha and omega, but they are not parts of Him; God as uncompound is single; He is an intelligible circle whose centre is everywhere and whose boundary is nowhere.",
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2026-01-03 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2026-01-01 using wiktextract (96027d6 and 9905b1f). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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