NOUN
- the ability (said of certain Roman Catholic saints) to exist simultaneously in two locations
How To Use bilocation In A Sentence
- His followers endow him with supernatural gifts, like bilocation - the ability to be in two places at once - predicting the future and healing the sick.
- Meanwhile, Therese of Liseiux lived a live that was, by all external measures, boring and rather uneventful with no displays of bilocation, miracles, or bells and whistles.
- His most famous miracles include bilocation, his rendering harmless of poisoned food by making the sign of the cross and his sermon to the fishes on the bank of the river Brenta near Padua.
- Padre Pio, with his legendary feats of bilocation, mind-reading (or more properly, soul reading) levitation and stigmata, is the sort of Catholic saint even the Vatican once considered embarrassing.
- It corresponds in this sense to the clinical condition of autoscopy: the relatively rare cases of psychological bilocation where individuals see themselves in another body.
- McDowell must have the gift of bilocation, because he appeared at the door of another Last Post spy in Ranelagh that night between 9pm and 10 pm canvassing.
- His supernatural status was confirmed by a golden thigh, the gift of bilocation, and the capacity to recall his previous incarnations.
- Unless GAA players manage to crack bilocation, the inter-county dual star is on the wane.
- It also notes that the stories of the alleged "bilocation" surfaced well after the death of Mary of Agredo. Quote of the day | RELIGION Blog | dallasnews.com
- Since I clearly am still unable to accomplish the feat of bilocation, the bank was most cooperative. Ripped off Prevention Tactics