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Jude

[ US /ˈdʒud/ ]
NOUN
  1. a New Testament book attributed to Saint Jude
  2. (New Testament) supposed brother of St. James; one of the Apostles who is invoked in prayer when a situation seems hopeless

How To Use Jude In A Sentence

  • One interesting object in the show connecting Egyptian magic to Judeo-Christian tradition is a lion-headed "gargoyle" that most likely adorned a temple dating to the Late (525-332 B.C.) or Ptolemaic (332-30 B.C.) periods. Spellbound in Brooklyn
  • `Me and Jude we figure you could come out even didn't know you'd decontrol like that "Iz said. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
  • The ostraca are included, while texts from other sites in the Judean Desert will be included in a subsequent volume of the concordance.
  • Thinking it was Jude, she leapt up and streaked across the room.
  • - (containing the "disputable" books - 2 Peter, 2nd 3rd John, Jude, the Apocalpse, Letter of Hermes, Didache, etc.) never became a cause for schism. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • If obsession is about repetition and patterns of behaviour and often a means of gaining control in uncontrollable situations then the order that Jude aches to find in her life is being cleverly reflected visually in the unusual use and placing of words on the page. In Search of Adam
  • At his suggestion I tackled the Judeo-German Weiber literature.
  • The Second Testament Judean writers used the Greek term eirene for shalom, possessing much the same meaning and usage to apply to the gospel.
  • Micki, another of Mont's followers, recalls her uncles and aunts occasionally peppering their Spanish with unfamiliar words and phrases, which she later learned were from Ladino, a Judeo-Spanish dialect.
  • The farthing was a small coin used in Judea, equal to two mites. Barnes New Testament Notes
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