transmigration

[ UK /tɹænsmɪɡɹˈe‍ɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. the passing of a soul into another body after death
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How To Use transmigration In A Sentence

  • Metempsychosis, he said , frowning. It's Greek: from the Greek. hat means the transmigration of souls.
  • Monks, from an inconstruable comes transmigration. Undefined
  • Naturally, he regarded the pagan Platonists as mistaken in accepting polytheism, everlasting world-cycles, and the transmigration of souls.
  • They must have a fantastic traffic in the transmigration of souls.
  • This is the concept of Transmigration of Souls – reincarnation, 'scientifically' redefined as the separability of animate cause [vitality] from the matter it animates. Dawkins on the OOL
  • From this point of view, it would seem that "Gil'gool'em" is more especially the cycle of atomic transmigration: _Resurrection_. Reincarnation A Study in Human Evolution
  • So Virginia, Laura and Clarissa demonstrate a metempsychosis, a transmigration of souls; the languor of their private breakdowns are cousins to each other.
  • Here flocks of cranes, geese lapwings, curlews, cushats and other birds stop here during their transmigration.
  • Belief in rebirth is almost worldwide—it is also sometimes called reincarnation, metempsychosis, palingenesis, or transmigration of souls. Experiencing the Next World Now
  • It is true that original sin hath induced this corruption and incineration upon us; if we had not sinned in Adam, _mortality had not put on immortality_ [366] (as the apostle speaks), nor _corruption had not put on incorruption_, but we had had our transmigration from this to the other world without any mortality, any corruption at all. Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions Together with Death's Duel
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