VS.

Consubstantial vs. Consubstantiate

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Consubstantialadjective

Of the same substance or essence.

Consubstantiateadjective

Partaking of the same substance; consubstantial.

Consubstantialadjective

Of the same kind or nature; having the same substance or essence; coessential.

‘Christ Jesus . . . coeternal and consubstantial with the Father and with the Holy Ghost.’;

Consubstantiateverb

(intransitive) To profess or believe the doctrine of consubstantiation.

Consubstantialadjective

regarded as the same in substance or essence (as of the three persons of the Trinity)

Consubstantiateverb

(transitive) To cause to unite, or to regard as united, in one common substance or nature.

Consubstantiateverb

(intransitive) To become united in one common substance or nature.

Consubstantiateverb

To cause to unite, or to regard as united, in one common substance or nature.

‘His soul must be consubstantiated with reason.’;

Consubstantiateverb

To profess or belive the doctrine of consubstantion.

‘The consubstantiating church and priest.’;

Consubstantiateadjective

Partaking of the same substance; united; consubstantial.

‘We must love her [the wife] that is thus consubstantiate with us.’;

Consubstantiateverb

become united in substance;

‘thought and the object consubstantiate’;

Consubstantiateverb

unite in one common substance;

‘Thought is consubstantiated with the object’;

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